4.5 Editorial Material

Criteria for item selection for a preference-based measure for use in economic evaluation

Journal

QUALITY OF LIFE RESEARCH
Volume 30, Issue 5, Pages 1425-1432

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s11136-020-02718-9

Keywords

PROMs; Item selection; Question selection; Preference-based measures; Quality of life; Utility

Funding

  1. UK Medical Research Council
  2. EuroQol Research Foundation
  3. NIHR Applied Research Collaboration Yorkshire and Humber
  4. MRC [MR/P015549/1] Funding Source: UKRI

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Preference-based measures allow patients to report their health levels, and the responses are scored using preference weights for cost utility analysis. The development of new measures should ensure valid items are selected to reflect the constructs of interest and suitable for preference-elicitation exercises. Criteria covering 22 aspects related to item selection for preference-based measures are presented to support the development process.
Preference-based measures allow patients to report their level of health, and the responses are then scored using preference weights from a representative general population sample for use in cost utility analysis. The development process of new preference-based measures should ensure that valid items are selected to reflect the constructs of interest included in the measure and that are suitable for use in preference-elicitation exercises. Existing criteria on patient-reported outcome measures (PROMs) development were reviewed, and additional considerations were taken into account in order to generate criteria to support development of new preference-based measures. Criteria covering 22 different aspects related to item selection for preference-based measures are presented. These include criteria related to how items are phrased to ensure accurate completion, the coverage of items in terms of range of domains as well as focus on current outcomes and whether items are suitable for valuation. The criteria are aimed at supporting the development of new preference-based measures with discussion to ensure that even where there is conflict between criteria, issues have been considered at the item selection stage. This would minimize problems at valuation stage by harmonizing established criteria and expanding lists to reflect the unique characteristics of preference-based measures.

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