Health and Quality of Life Outcomes (Apr 2024)

Health state utility estimates for value assessments of novel treatments in Huntington’s disease: a systematic literature review

  • Ruta Sawant,
  • Kyle Paret,
  • Jennifer Petrillo,
  • Aaron Koenig,
  • Sorrel Wolowacz,
  • Naoko Ronquest,
  • Hugh Rickards

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s12955-024-02242-1
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 22, no. 1
pp. 1 – 15

Abstract

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Abstract Background Huntington’s disease (HD) is a progressive neurodegenerative disease with a devastating impact on patients and their families. Quantifying how treatments affect patient outcomes is critical for informing reimbursement decisions. Many countries mandate a formal value assessment in which the treatment benefit is measured as quality-adjusted life-years, calculated with the use of utility estimates that reflect respondents’ preferences for health states. Objective To summarize published health state utility data in HD and identify gaps and uncertainties in the data available that could be used to inform value assessments. Methods We conducted a systematic literature review of studies that used preference-based instruments (e.g., EQ-5D and SF-6D) to estimate utility values for people with HD. The studies were published between January 2012 and December 2022. Results Of 383 articles screened, 16 articles reported utility values estimated in 11 distinct studies. The utility measure most frequently reported was EQ-5D (9/11 studies). Two studies reported SF-6D data; one used time trade-off methods to value health state descriptions (vignettes). Although utility scores generally worsened to a lower value with increased HD severity, the estimates varied considerably across studies. The EQ-5D index range was 0.89 − 0.72 for mild/prodromal HD and 0.71 − 0.37 for severe/late-stage disease. Conclusions This study uncovered high variability in published utility estimates, indicating substantial uncertainty in existing data. Further research is needed to better understand preferences and valuation across all stages and domains of HD symptoms and the degree to which generic utility measures capture the impact of cognitive changes on quality of life.

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