Abstract

ObjectiveTo evaluate two different methods to obtain a dead (0)—full health (1) scale for EQ-5D-5L valuation studies when using discrete choice (DC) modeling.MethodThe study was carried out among 400 respondents from Barcelona who were representative of the Spanish population in terms of age, sex, and level of education. The DC design included 50 pairs of health states in five blocks. Participants were forced to choose between two EQ-5D-5L states (A and B). Two extra questions concerned whether A and B were considered worse than dead. Each participant performed ten choice exercises. In addition, values were collected using lead-time trade-off (lead-time TTO), for which 100 states in ten blocks were selected. Each participant performed five lead-time TTO exercises. These consisted of DC models offering the health state ‘dead’ as one of the choices—for which all participants’ responses were used (DCdead)—and a model that included only the responses of participants who chose at least one state as worse than dead (WTD) (DCWTD). The study also estimated DC models rescaled with lead-time TTO data and a lead-time TTO linear model.ResultsThe DCdead and DCWTD models produced relatively similar results, although the coefficients in the DCdead model were slightly lower. The DC model rescaled with lead-time TTO data produced higher utility decrements. Lead-time TTO produced the highest utility decrements.ConclusionsThe incorporation of the state ‘dead’ in the DC models produces results in concordance with DC models that do not include ‘dead’.

Highlights

  • The EQ-5D is one of the most widely used preference-based instruments

  • The discrete choice (DC) model rescaled with lead-time time trade-off (TTO) data produced higher utility decrements

  • A secondary objective was to evaluate the effect of excluding DC responses elicited from those who did not consider any health state to be worse than the health state dead. This pilot study used both a DC and a lead-time trade-off approach to produce values for the set of 3,125 (55) health states defined by the EQ-5D-5L instrument

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Summary

Introduction

The EQ-5D is one of the most widely used preference-based instruments. In 2009, the EuroQol Group released a new version (EQ-5D-5L) of the instrument that included five levels of severity in each dimension, as opposed to three in the original version [1]. For the new instrument to generate a set of societal values for the 3,125 health states, it had to distinguish five levels of severity in five dimensions. Previous valuation studies had predominantly used time trade-off (TTO) to obtain social preferences from which value sets for EQ-5D health states could be modeled [2,3,4,5].

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