Systematic Review of the Psychometric Performance of Generic Childhood Multi-attribute Utility Instruments
Date
2023
Authors
Kwon, Joseph
Smith, Sarah
Raghunandan, Rakhee
Howell, Martin
Huynh, Elisabeth
Kim, Sungwook
Bentley, Thomas
Roberts, Nia
Lancsar, Emily
Howard, K
Journal Title
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Volume Title
Publisher
Springer Nature
Abstract
Background Childhood multi-attribute utility instruments (MAUIs) can be used to measure health utilities in children (aged
≤ 18 years) for economic evaluation. Systematic review methods can generate a psychometric evidence base that informs
their selection for application. Previous reviews focused on limited sets of MAUIs and psychometric properties, and only on
evidence from studies that directly aimed to conduct psychometric assessments.
Objective This study aimed to conduct a systematic review of psychometric evidence for generic childhood MAUIs and to
meet three objectives: (1) create a comprehensive catalogue of evaluated psychometric evidence; (2) identify psychometric
evidence gaps; and (3) summarise the psychometric assessment methods and performance by property.
Methods A review protocol was registered with the Prospective Register of Systematic Reviews (PROSPERO;
CRD42021295959); reporting followed the Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses (PRISMA)
2020 guideline. The searches covered seven academic databases, and included studies that provided psychometric evidence
for one or more of the following generic childhood MAUIs designed to be accompanied by a preference-based value set
(any language version): 16D, 17D, AHUM, AQoL-6D, CH-6D, CHSCS-PS, CHU9D, EQ-5D-Y-3L, EQ-5D-Y-5L, HUI2,
HUI3, IQI, QWB, and TANDI; used data derived from general and/or clinical childhood populations and from children and/
or proxy respondents; and were published in English. The review included ‘direct studies’ that aimed to assess psychometric
properties and ‘indirect studies’ that generated psychometric evidence without this explicit aim. Eighteen properties were
evaluated using a four-part criteria rating developed from established standards in the literature. Data syntheses identifed
psychometric evidence gaps and summarised the psychometric assessment methods/results by property.
Results Overall, 372 studies were included, generating a catalogue of 2153 criteria rating outputs across 14 instruments
covering all properties except predictive validity. The number of outputs varied markedly by instrument and property,
ranging from 1 for IQI to 623 for HUI3, and from zero for predictive validity to 500 for known-group validity. The more
recently developed instruments targeting preschool children (CHSCS-PS, IQI, TANDI) have greater evidence gaps (lack
of any evidence) than longer established instruments such as EQ-5D-Y, HUI2/3, and CHU9D. The gaps were prominent
for reliability (test–retest, inter-proxy-rater, inter-modal, internal consistency) and proxy-child agreement. The inclusion of
indirect studies (n = 209 studies; n = 900 outputs) increased the number of properties with at least one output of acceptable
performance. Common methodological issues in psychometric assessment were identifed, e.g., lack of reference measures
to help interpret associations and changes. No instrument consistently outperformed others across all properties.
Conclusion This review provides comprehensive evidence on the psychometric performance of generic childhood MAUIs.
It assists analysts involved in cost-efectiveness-based evaluation to select instruments based on the application-specifc
minimum standards of scientifc rigour. The identifed evidence gaps and methodological issues also motivate and inform
future psychometric studies and their methods, particularly those assessing reliability, proxy-child agreement, and MAUIs
targeting preschool children.
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Applied Health Economics and Health Policy
Type
Journal article
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Open Access
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Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International License
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