Loading…

How much is enough and who says so?

Background  One of the challenges of health‐related quality of life research is to translate statistically significant health‐related quality of life changes into interpretable clinical or medically important ones. Objective  To calculate the minimal important difference of the King's Health Qu...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Published in:BJOG : an international journal of obstetrics and gynaecology 2004-06, Vol.111 (6), p.605-612
Main Authors: Kelleher, Con J., Pleil, Andreas M., Reese, Pat Ray, Burgess, Somali Misra, Brodish, Paul H.
Format: Article
Language:English
Subjects:
Citations: Items that cite this one
Online Access:Get full text
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
Description
Summary:Background  One of the challenges of health‐related quality of life research is to translate statistically significant health‐related quality of life changes into interpretable clinical or medically important ones. Objective  To calculate the minimal important difference of the King's Health Questionnaire, a condition‐specific health‐related quality of life questionnaire for the assessment of men and women with lower urinary tract dysfunction. Methods  The King's Health Questionnaire was administered to patients suffering from overactive bladder enrolled in two multinational studies. Minimal important differences were calculated using an anchor‐based approach with both a global rating of patient‐perceived treatment benefit and one of perceived disease impact. A distribution‐based method using effect size was calculated for comparison purposes. Results  Minimal important difference values varied slightly with each method. Using the anchor‐based approach, the King's Health Questionnaire minimal important difference ranged between 5–10 points when the calculation factored out patients who reported no change and 6–12 points for patients who experienced a small improvement. The effect size method indicated a minimal important difference of 5 to 6 points for a small effect and 10 to 15 points for a medium effect. Conclusions  In the case of the King's Health Questionnaire, the anchor‐based approaches and the distribution‐based approach provide similar results. A change from baseline of at least 5 points on King's Health Questionnaire domains indicates a change that is meaningful to patients and is indicative of a clinically meaningful improvement in health‐related quality of life after treatment. Convergence of the estimates using different approaches should give us confidence in the values derived for the quality of life domains measured by the King's Health Questionnaire.
ISSN:1470-0328
1471-0528
DOI:10.1111/j.1471-0528.2004.00129.x