Abstract

Aims/hypothesisIt is generally accepted that hypoglycaemia can negatively impact the quality of life (QoL) of people living with diabetes. However, the suitability of patient-reported outcome measures (PROMs) used to assess this impact is unclear. The aim of this systematic review was to identify PROMs used to assess the impact of hypoglycaemia on QoL and examine their quality and psychometric properties.MethodsSystematic searches (MEDLINE, EMBASE, PsycINFO, CINAHL and The Cochrane Library databases) were undertaken to identify published articles reporting on the development or validation of hypoglycaemia-specific PROMs used to assess the impact of hypoglycaemia on QoL (or domains of QoL) in adults with diabetes. A protocol was developed and registered with PROSPERO (registration no. CRD42019125153). Studies were assessed for inclusion at title/abstract stage by one reviewer. Full-text articles were scrutinised where considered relevant or potentially relevant or where doubt existed. Twenty per cent of articles were assessed by a second reviewer. PROMS were evaluated, according to COnsensus-based Standards for the selection of health Measurement INstruments (COSMIN) guidelines, and data were extracted independently by two reviewers against COSMIN criteria. Assessment of each PROM’s content validity included reviewer ratings (N = 16) of relevance, comprehensiveness and comprehensibility: by researchers (n = 6); clinicians (n = 6); and adults with diabetes (n = 4).ResultsOf the 214 PROMs used to assess the impact of hypoglycaemia on QoL (or domains of QoL), eight hypoglycaemia-specific PROMS were identified and subjected to full evaluation: the Fear of Hypoglycemia 15-item scale; the Hypoglycemia Fear Survey; the Hypoglycemia Fear Survey version II; the Hypoglycemia Fear Survey-II short-form; the Hypoglycemic Attitudes and Behavior Scale; the Hypoglycemic Confidence Scale; the QoLHYPO questionnaire and the Treatment-Related Impact Measure-Non-severe Hypoglycemic Events (TRIM-HYPO) questionnaire. Content validity was rated as ‘inconsistent’, with most as ‘(very) low’ quality, while structural validity was deemed ‘unsatisfactory’ or 'indeterminate'. Other measurement properties (e.g. reliability) varied, and evidence gaps were apparent across all PROMs. None of the identified studies addressed cross-cultural validity or measurement error. Criterion validity and responsiveness were not assessed due to the lack of a ‘gold standard’ measure of the impact of hypoglycaemia on QoL against which to compare the PROMS.Conclusions/interpretationNone of the hypoglycaemia-specific PROMs identified had sufficient evidence to demonstrate satisfactory validity, reliability and responsiveness. All were limited in terms of content and structural validity, which restricts their utility for assessing the impact of hypoglycaemia on QoL in the clinic or research setting. Further research is needed to address the content validity of existing PROMs, or the development of new PROM(s), for the purpose of assessing the impact of hypoglycaemia on QoL.Prospero registrationCRD42019125153Graphical abstract

Highlights

  • Both the experience and the risk of hypoglycaemia can have a serious negative impact on the quality of life (QoL) of adults with diabetes [1–8]

  • The search returned a total of 3661 unique records, from which 214 patient-reported outcome measures (PROMs) were identified as used in studies to assess the impact of hypoglycaemia on QoL or subdomains of QoL (Fig. 2, Table 3)

  • The current review includes seven hypoglycaemia-specific PROMs that have been used to assess the impact of hypoglycaemia on QoL or at least one aspect of QoL: the Fear of Hypoglycemia 15-item scale (FH15); the Hypoglycemia Fear Survey (HFS); the Hypoglycemia Fear Survey version II (HFS-II); the HFS-II short-form; the Hypoglycemic Attitudes and Behavior Scale (HABS); the Hypoglycemic Confidence Scale (HCS); and the QoLHYPO questionnaire (Table 4)

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Summary

Introduction

Both the experience and the risk of hypoglycaemia can have a serious negative impact on the quality of life (QoL) of adults with diabetes [1–8]. Living a life of quality is perhaps the ultimate goal, so protecting QoL is a daily burden for people experiencing or at risk of hypoglycaemia, and one that can be contradictory to the goals of medical therapy [8]. This may be the case in those who aim for very tight glucose targets. The extent of this impact on QoL can be assessed using patient-reported outcome measures (PROMs). When applied to the study of hypoglycaemia in diabetes, PROMs can facilitate an assessment of the psychological and economic burden of hypoglycaemia, which can be used to determine the value of therapeutic approaches to reducing hypoglycaemia frequency and severity

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