학술논문

EQ-5D studies in musculoskeletal and connective tissue diseases in eight Central and Eastern European countries: a systematic literature review and meta-analysis.
Document Type
Article
Source
Rheumatology International. Dec2017, Vol. 37 Issue 12, p1957-1977. 21p.
Subject
*MEDICAL technology
*MUSCULOSKELETAL system diseases
*META-analysis
*RHEUMATOID arthritis
*OSTEOARTHRITIS
Language
ISSN
0172-8172
Abstract
EQ-5D is becoming the preferred instrument to measure health-state utilities involved in health technology assessment. The objective of this study is to assess the state of EQ-5D research in musculoskeletal disorders in 8 Central and Eastern European countries and to provide a meta-analysis of EQ-5D index scores. Original research articles published in any language between Jan 2000 and Sept 2016 were included, if they reported any EQ-5D outcome from at least two musculoskeletal patients from Austria, Bulgaria, the Czech Republic, Hungary, Poland, Romania, Slovakia, or Slovenia. Risk of bias was assessed with the Cochrane Collaboration's tool. Twenty-nine articles (5992 patients) were included on rheumatoid arthritis ( n = 7), osteoporosis ( n = 5), chronic pain ( n = 5), osteoarthritis ( n = 4), ankylosing spondylitis ( n = 2), psoriatic arthritis ( n = 2), total hip replacement ( n = 2), and scleroderma ( n = 2). Low back pain was under-represented, while studies in neck pain, systemic lupus erythematosus, gout, and childhood disorders were lacking. EQ-5D index scores were reported in 24 studies, while the version of the instrument and the value-set was not specified in 41% and 46% of the articles, respectively. Meta-analysis was performed on 24 disease states involving 6876 observation points. Intervention effect was reported in 22 subgroups, out of which risk of bias was low in 41%. This review provides recommendations to improve reporting standards of EQ-5D results and highlights potential areas for future research. Coordinated research in conditions with greatest public health impact as well as a development of a regional value-set could provide locally relevant health-state utilities that are transferable among countries within the region. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]