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Evaluation of Medicine • Two types: – Societal level • Economic evaluation – Individual level • medical decision making

Evaluation of Medicine Two types: –Societal level Economic evaluation –Individual level medical decision making

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Page 1: Evaluation of Medicine Two types: –Societal level Economic evaluation –Individual level medical decision making

Evaluation of Medicine

• Two types:

– Societal level• Economic evaluation

– Individual level• medical decision making

Page 2: Evaluation of Medicine Two types: –Societal level Economic evaluation –Individual level medical decision making

Economic Evaluation

• Comparison of costs and benefits

• Central question: How can we express the benefits of health care numerically?

Page 3: Evaluation of Medicine Two types: –Societal level Economic evaluation –Individual level medical decision making

Approaches

• Ignore health benefits - Cost minimization

• Express benefits as life-years gained

• Contingent valuation - CBA

• Express benefits as utilities - CUA

Page 4: Evaluation of Medicine Two types: –Societal level Economic evaluation –Individual level medical decision making

Medical Decision Making

• Optimal treatment selection

• Common approach: perform decision analysis expressing benefits in utility terms

Page 5: Evaluation of Medicine Two types: –Societal level Economic evaluation –Individual level medical decision making

QALYs

• Question: which utility model?

• Most common model:

– Quality-Adjusted Life-Years (QALYs)

Page 6: Evaluation of Medicine Two types: –Societal level Economic evaluation –Individual level medical decision making

QALYs

• Additive model:

• Let (q1,..., qT) be health profile

• QALY model: U (q1,..., qT) = V(qi )

Page 7: Evaluation of Medicine Two types: –Societal level Economic evaluation –Individual level medical decision making

Example

• Living for 10 years with asthma

• Suppose V(asthma) = 0.5

• QALYs (10 years asthma) = 5

Page 8: Evaluation of Medicine Two types: –Societal level Economic evaluation –Individual level medical decision making

QALYs

• Advantages– intuitively appealing– easy to use in practice

• Disadvantages– may be too restrictive

Page 9: Evaluation of Medicine Two types: –Societal level Economic evaluation –Individual level medical decision making

Two questions

• QALY model: U (q1,..., qT) = V(qi )

– How do we determine the utilities V(qi )?

– Which are the assumptions underlying the QALY model?

Page 10: Evaluation of Medicine Two types: –Societal level Economic evaluation –Individual level medical decision making

Basic Ingredients

• Set of health states H

• Set of lotteries P over H

• Preference relation R over P

• Representing function V:PIR such that

V(P) V(Q) iff x R y

Page 11: Evaluation of Medicine Two types: –Societal level Economic evaluation –Individual level medical decision making

Assumptions

• Health states are chronic: H = TQ

• Health states are positive, i.e., preferred to death

• Expected utility holds

Page 12: Evaluation of Medicine Two types: –Societal level Economic evaluation –Individual level medical decision making

Expected Utility

• V((Q1,T1), p, (Q2,T2)) =

pU(Q1,T1) + (1p)U(Q2,T2)

• U = a + bU, a real, b > 0

Page 13: Evaluation of Medicine Two types: –Societal level Economic evaluation –Individual level medical decision making

Chronic Health States

• Two attribute utility function

U(Q,T) = V(Q)*T

Q set of positive health states, T set of durations

Page 14: Evaluation of Medicine Two types: –Societal level Economic evaluation –Individual level medical decision making

First characterization

• Pliskin, Shepard & Weinstein (1980)

• 3 conditions– (mutual) utility independence– constant proportional trade-off– risk neutrality wrt life-years

Page 15: Evaluation of Medicine Two types: –Societal level Economic evaluation –Individual level medical decision making

Utility independence

• Quality of life is utility independent of duration if preferences over lotteries on quality of life holding duration fixed do not depend on the level at which duration is held fixed

• Duration is utility independent of quality of life if preferences over lotteries on duration holding quality of life fixed do not depend on the level at which quality of life is held fixed

Page 16: Evaluation of Medicine Two types: –Societal level Economic evaluation –Individual level medical decision making

Formally

• If (p1,(Q1,T);….;pm,(Qm,T)) R (r1,(Q1,T);….;rm,

(Qm,T))

• then

• (p1,(Q1,T);….;pm,(Qm,T)) R (r1,(Q1,T);….;rm,

(Qm,T))

Page 17: Evaluation of Medicine Two types: –Societal level Economic evaluation –Individual level medical decision making

And

• If (p1,(Q,T1);….;pm,(Q,Tm)) R (r1,(Q,T1);….;rm,

(Q,Tm))

• then

• (p1,(Q,T1);….;pm,(Q,Tm)) R (r1,(Q,T1);….;rm,

(Q,Tm))

Page 18: Evaluation of Medicine Two types: –Societal level Economic evaluation –Individual level medical decision making

Standard gamble

• (20y, Asthma) ((20y, FH), 2/3, (20y, Death))

• Then also

• (40y, Asthma) ((40y, FH), 2/3, (40y, Death))

Page 19: Evaluation of Medicine Two types: –Societal level Economic evaluation –Individual level medical decision making

Intermediate result

• The following statements are equivalent:

– utility independence holds

– U is either additive, U(Q,T) = V(Q) + W(T), or multiplicative U(Q,T) = V(Q)*W(T)

Page 20: Evaluation of Medicine Two types: –Societal level Economic evaluation –Individual level medical decision making

Hence

• To arrive at the QALY model must

(i) exclude the additive model

and

(ii) ensure linearity of W(T).

Page 21: Evaluation of Medicine Two types: –Societal level Economic evaluation –Individual level medical decision making

Constant proportional tradeoffs

• The preference relation satisfies constant proportional tradeoffs if

(Q1,T1) (Q2,T2) iff (Q1,T1) (Q2, T2)

for all Q1, Q2 in Q, T1, T2, T1, T2 in T and nonnegative

Page 22: Evaluation of Medicine Two types: –Societal level Economic evaluation –Individual level medical decision making

Time Trade-off

• If (Q1,T1) (Q2,T2) then

• U(Q1) = T2/T1

Page 23: Evaluation of Medicine Two types: –Societal level Economic evaluation –Individual level medical decision making

Example

• (10 years asthma) ~ (8 years FH)

• U(asthma) = 0.8

• (20 years asthma) ~ (16 years FH)

Page 24: Evaluation of Medicine Two types: –Societal level Economic evaluation –Individual level medical decision making

Exercise

• Show that CPT excludes the additive model

• Hence– U(Q,T) = V(Q)*W(T)

Page 25: Evaluation of Medicine Two types: –Societal level Economic evaluation –Individual level medical decision making

Risk neutrality

• Risk neutrality wrt life-years

• Risk neutrality for duration holds if for a fixed health status level all treatments with equal expected life duration are equivalent.

• (20y., FH) ~ ((40y., FH), 0.5; (0y, FH))

Page 26: Evaluation of Medicine Two types: –Societal level Economic evaluation –Individual level medical decision making

Implications

• W(T) linear

• Hence, have derived the QALY model

Page 27: Evaluation of Medicine Two types: –Societal level Economic evaluation –Individual level medical decision making

Utility Independence

10 30 50 70

Uti

lity

Duration

CPT

10 30 50 70

Uti

lity

Duration

Risk Neutrality

10 30 50 70

Uti

lity

Duration

Uniqueness

10 30 50 70

Uti

lity

Duration

Page 28: Evaluation of Medicine Two types: –Societal level Economic evaluation –Individual level medical decision making

Theorem

• Under EU the following two statements are equivalent

– The QALY model represents preferences for health

– The preference relation satisfies utility independence, constant proportional tradeoffs and risk neutrality wrt life-years

Page 29: Evaluation of Medicine Two types: –Societal level Economic evaluation –Individual level medical decision making

Less restrictive result

• Take the opposite route

• Start with risk neutrality wrt life-years

• U(Q,T) is linear in life-years

Page 30: Evaluation of Medicine Two types: –Societal level Economic evaluation –Individual level medical decision making

Hence

• U(Q,T) = A(Q) + V(Q)*T

• Note: negative health states are allowed

Page 31: Evaluation of Medicine Two types: –Societal level Economic evaluation –Individual level medical decision making

Hence

• Have to get rid of term A(Q) to obtain QALY model.

• Assume zero condition: for duration zero all health states are equivalent

Page 32: Evaluation of Medicine Two types: –Societal level Economic evaluation –Individual level medical decision making

Exercise

• Show that the zero condition implies that A(Q) = 0 for all Q.

Page 33: Evaluation of Medicine Two types: –Societal level Economic evaluation –Individual level medical decision making

Risk Neutrality

10 30 50 70

Uti

lity

Duration

Zero Condition

10 30 50 70

Uti

lity

Duration

Uniqueness

10 30 50 70

Uti

lity

Duration

Page 34: Evaluation of Medicine Two types: –Societal level Economic evaluation –Individual level medical decision making

Theorem

• Under EU the following two statements are equivalent

– The QALY model is representing– The preference relation satisfies risk neutrality

wrt life-years and the zero condition

Page 35: Evaluation of Medicine Two types: –Societal level Economic evaluation –Individual level medical decision making

Hence

• In PSW representation can drop

• utility independence

• and can weaken CPT to zero condition

Page 36: Evaluation of Medicine Two types: –Societal level Economic evaluation –Individual level medical decision making

Empirical evidence

• Zero condition unobjectionable

• People are risk averse wrt life-years

• Hence, QALY model not descriptively valid

• Normative status risk neutrality?

Page 37: Evaluation of Medicine Two types: –Societal level Economic evaluation –Individual level medical decision making

More general model

• U(Q,T) = V(Q)*W(T)

• Miyamoto, Wakker, Bleichrodt & Peters (1998)

Page 38: Evaluation of Medicine Two types: –Societal level Economic evaluation –Individual level medical decision making

Standard Gamble Invariance

• For Q and Q unequal to death:

(Q,T) ((Q,Y), p, (Q,Z))

iff

(Q,T) ((Q,Y), p, (Q,Z))

Page 39: Evaluation of Medicine Two types: –Societal level Economic evaluation –Individual level medical decision making

Then

• U(Q,T) = V(Q)*W(T) + A(Q)

• Zero condition: A(Q) = 0

Page 40: Evaluation of Medicine Two types: –Societal level Economic evaluation –Individual level medical decision making

Theorem

• Under EU the following two statements are equivalent

– The nonlinear QALY model is representing– The preference relation satisfies standard

gamble invariance and the zero condition

Page 41: Evaluation of Medicine Two types: –Societal level Economic evaluation –Individual level medical decision making

One more result

• Under EU the following two statements are equivalent

– U(Q,T) = V(Q)*T

– The preference relation satisfies standard gamble invariance and constant proportional trade-offs

Page 42: Evaluation of Medicine Two types: –Societal level Economic evaluation –Individual level medical decision making

Empirical evidence

There is support for

utility independence Miyamoto&ErakerBleichrodt&Johannesson Guerrero Bleichrodt&Pinto

and constant proportional tradeoffs

Bleichrodt&Johannesson

Page 43: Evaluation of Medicine Two types: –Societal level Economic evaluation –Individual level medical decision making

However

• Maximal endurable time– violates utility independence

• Lexicographic preferences for low durations– violates constant proportional tradeoffs– more in line with increasing proportional

tradeoffs

Page 44: Evaluation of Medicine Two types: –Societal level Economic evaluation –Individual level medical decision making

Maximal Endurable Time

10 20

Uti

lity

Duration

Page 45: Evaluation of Medicine Two types: –Societal level Economic evaluation –Individual level medical decision making

Lexicographic Preferences

10 20

Uti

lity

Duration

Health state A

Health state B

Page 46: Evaluation of Medicine Two types: –Societal level Economic evaluation –Individual level medical decision making

Alternative measures

• Mehrez & Gafni (1989): Healthy-years equivalent (HYEs)

• (q1,..., qT) (Full health, T´)

• HYEs (q1,..., qT) = T´

Page 47: Evaluation of Medicine Two types: –Societal level Economic evaluation –Individual level medical decision making

Claim

• ´´HYEs impose no assumptions on the utility function and are therefore entirely general´´

• Q: Is this claim true?

Page 48: Evaluation of Medicine Two types: –Societal level Economic evaluation –Individual level medical decision making

2-stage measurement procedure

• First stage: determine p such that

(q1,..., qT) ((FH,T), p, death)

• Second stage: determine T´ such that ((FH,T), p, death) (FH,T´)

Page 49: Evaluation of Medicine Two types: –Societal level Economic evaluation –Individual level medical decision making

Argument

• Two-stage gamble leads to same result as directly determining T´ from(q1,..., qT) (Full health, T´)

Questions:

– Is this argument correct?

– If so, is it true that HYEs are exactly as restrictive as QALYs?