Patient Preference and Adherence (Jun 2019)

Real-world utilities and health-related quality-of-life data in hemophilia patients in France and the United Kingdom

  • Carroll L,
  • Benson G,
  • Lambert J,
  • Benmedjahed K,
  • Zak M,
  • Lee XY

Journal volume & issue
Vol. Volume 13
pp. 941 – 957

Abstract

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Liz Carroll,1 Gary Benson,2 Jérémy Lambert,3 Khadra Benmedjahed,3 Marek Zak,4 Xin Ying Lee51Haemophilia Society, London, UK; 2Northern Ireland Haemophilia Comprehensive Care Centre and Thrombosis Unit, Belfast City Hospital, Belfast, UK; 3Patient-Centered Outcomes, Mapi, an ICON plc company, Lyon, France; 4Global Development, Medical & Science, Biopharm, Novo Nordisk, Søborg, Denmark; 5Global Biopharm Patient Access, Novo Nordisk, Søborg, DenmarkPurpose: Congenital hemophilia A and B are bleeding disorders characterized by deficiency of factors VIII and IX, respectively. This study aimed to collect health-related quality-of-life (HRQoL) and health-utility data from hemophilia patients with differing disease severity.Methods: Individuals with hemophilia aged ≥12 years living in France or the UK completed a series of questionnaires, including the EQ-5D-3L and -5L and SF-36 version 2. Association with demographic and clinical variables was explored using linear regression, and health-utility comparison was completed using Pearson and intraclass correlation coefficients.Results: A total of 122 patients in France and 62 in the UK completed the survey. The combined sample primarily consisted of hemophilia A patients, mean age of 41 years, 70% had severe hemophilia, and 56% were on long-term prophylaxis. Similar HRQoL and utility scores were observed across the French and UK samples. The presence of more than two target joints, occurrence of joint surgery, and increased joint-pain frequency were independent predictors of lower SF-36 — physical health summary scores and lower health-utility scores. No statistically significant reductions in SF-36 — mental health summary scores were observed, except for participants with target joints. Strong correlations were observed between health- utility values derived from the three instruments (r=0.69–0.79).Conclusion: Results of this study reinforce the importance of appropriate treatment to limit the physical burden and long-term joint damage associated with hemophilia. Further, utility values collected here reflect real-world data, and can serve as health-state weights in future cost–utility analyses.Keywords: quality-of-life, health utility, hemophilia A, hemophilia B, survey

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