info:eu-repo/semantics/article
Peruvian Valuation of the EQ-5D-5L: A Direct Comparison of Time Trade-Off and Discrete Choice Experiments
Fecha
2020-07Registro en:
Augustovski, Federico Ariel; Belizán, María; Gibbons, Luz; Reyes, Nora; Stolk, Elly; et al.; Peruvian Valuation of the EQ-5D-5L: A Direct Comparison of Time Trade-Off and Discrete Choice Experiments; Elsevier; Value In Health; 23; 7; 7-2020; 880-888
1098-3015
CONICET Digital
CONICET
Autor
Augustovski, Federico Ariel
Belizán, María
Gibbons, Luz
Reyes, Nora
Stolk, Elly
Craig, Benjamin M.
Tejada, Romina A.
Resumen
Objectives: (1) To produce Peruvian general population EQ-5D-5L value sets on a quality-adjusted life-year scale, (2) to investigate the feasibility of a “Lite” protocol less reliant on the composite time trade-off (cTTO), and (3) to compare cTTO and discrete choice experiment (DCE) value sets. Methods: A random sample of adults (N = 1000) in Lima, Arequipa, and Iquitos did a home interview; 300 were randomly selected to complete 11 cTTOs first. All respondents completed a DCE, including 10 latent-scale pairs (A/B) with 5 EQ-5D-5L attributes, and 12 matched pairs (A/B and B/C) with 5 EQ-5D-5L and one lifespan attributes. We estimated a cTTO heteroscedastic tobit (N = 300) model and 3 DCE Zermelo-Bradley-Terry models (N = 300, 700, and 1000). Results: Each model produced a consistent value set (20 positive incremental parameters). Nevertheless, their lowest quality-adjusted life-year values differed greatly (cTTO: –1.076 [N = 300]; DCE: –0.984 [300], 0.048 [700], –0.213 [1000]). Compared with the cTTO, the DCE (N = 300) produced different parameters (Pearson's correlation = 0.541), fewer insignificant parameters (0 vs 8), and fewer values less than 0 (26% vs 44%). Compared with the DCE (N = 300), the DCE (N = 700) produced higher values but similar parameters (Pearson's correlation = 0.800). Conclusions: Besides producing EQ-5D-5L value sets for Peru, the results casts doubt about the feasibility of a Lite protocol like the one in this study. Additionally, fundamental differences between cTTO and DCE—without the existence of a gold standard—need further clarification. The choice between the two rational value sets produced in the current study is a matter of judgment and may have substantial policy implications.