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Quality of Life Assessment

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Presentation on theme: "Quality of Life Assessment"— Presentation transcript:

1 Quality of Life Assessment
Rick Chappell, Ph.D. Professor, Department of Biostatistics and Medical Informatics University of Wisconsin School of Medicine & Public Health – Week 1, Lecture 1 BMI 542 – Week 8, Lecture 2

2 Outline for Quality of Life
General background Data collection considerations A good reference: Fairclough, Design and Analysis of Quality of Life Studies in Clinical Trials, 2nd ed. Chapman & Hall, 2010.

3 Why Are We Interested in the Quality of Life?
The United States Food and Drug Administration has stated that efficacy with respect to overall survival and/or improvements in QOL might provide the basis for drug approval Shaughnessy JA, Wittes RE, Burke G et al. Commentary concerning demonstration of safety and efficacy of investigational anticancer agents in clinical trials. J Clin Oncol 1991; 9:

4 What is Quality of Life? WHO: “Health is not only the absence of infirmity and disease, but also a state of physical, mental and social well being Multiple domains: physical, cognitive, emotional and social functioning, pain, sexual functioning, health perceptions, and symptoms such as nausea and fatigue Fundamental principle: quality of life is assessed by the patient

5 Definition depends on context
Cancer vs. MI vs. hypertension Early instruments were disease specific Later, "general health status" instruments POMS = Profile of Mood SIP = Sickness Impact Profile Difficulties with concept No agreement on definitions Lack of standardized measures

6 One definition (Levine & Croog)
Two Components Functioning 1. Social (Major component) - Get along with family & friends | sense of worth 2. Physical - Perform daily life activities 3. Emotional - Stability and self control 4. Intellectual - Decision making ability Perceptions 1. Life Satisfaction - Sense of well being 2. Health Status - Compared to others

7 Factors Which Influence Quality of Life
1. Intervention 2. Disease Process 3. "Labeling"  Need a control group - Diagnosis brings on change 4. Concomitant Care 5. Non-related life events (e.g. death in family)

8 Rationale in Clinical Trials
Quality of life assesses effect of intervention primary response (treatment less toxic?) side effects (treatment toxic?) economic aspects (low risk/cost treatment but benefit high?)

9 How To Assess Quality of Life
Determine your QOL Objective Choose an instrument Reliable: “A measure is said to have a high reliability if it produces similar results under consistent conditions. “ Valid: “The degree to which an instrument measures what it is supposed to measure.” Global measures, disease-specific measures, symptom checklists Select your assessment time points and administration format Develop an analysis plan

10 Data Collection Considerations
Mode Self-administered glasses, reading skills, fine-motor skills Personal interview training/background of interviewer sensitivity to gender/ethnicity/age hearing impairment

11 Off-the-Shelf Instruments (Example-Nocturnal O2 Therapy Trial)
Design Advanced Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease 24 vs. 12 hours of O2 Quality of life 10 outcome (No norms in this pop!) Quality of Life Results  Patients were sick Patients got worse No treatment difference BUT Mortality ratio was 2/1 (p<.01) Ref: Ann Intern Med. 190, 93, 392-8, no authors listed.

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