Consistency Between Three Different Ways of Administering the Short Form 6 Dimension Version 2

Abstract

Background

The Short Form 6 Dimension (SF-6D) is a multi-attribute utility instrument derived from the Short-Form 36 Health Survey Version 2 (SF-36v2) quality of life questionnaire and is used to calculate quality-adjusted life years (QALYs) on a scale 0 to 1. The SF-6Dv2 is a new version of the SF-6D.

Objective

The aim of this study was to assess the consistency of respondents’ answers to 3 different methods to administer this new version.

Methods

SF-6Dv2 utility values were generated from the SF-36v2 using the following: (1) full questionnaire with 36 items (SF-6Dv2 ); (2) subset questionnaire with 10 items (SF-6Dv2 ); (3) SF-6Dv2 administered as an independent instrument (rephrased questionnaire with only 6 items [SF-6Dv2 ]). The order of the 3 instruments was randomly allocated between respondents.

Results

A total of 782 respondents from Quebec, Canada, were interviewed, out of whom 697 fully completed the survey. Very few deviations in respondents’ answers were observed between the 3 instruments, with mean weighted kappa of 0.79 (range 0.61-0.91) and mean global consistency index of 70% (range 54-83). Maximal difference in utility values generated was found between SF-6Dv2 and SF-6Dv2 (mean difference 0.016, P .01), whereas minimal difference was found between SF-6Dv2 and SF-6Dv2 (0.002, P = .38). No ceiling effect was observed.

Conclusions

The SF-6Dv2 was designed to derive utilities from the SF-36v2, and our results indicate that it is still preferable to use the full questionnaire, although the difference with other variants of the questionnaire is very small. To use the SF-6Dv2 as an independent instrument will thus introduce minimal bias in utility values generated.

Authors

Thomas G. Poder Vickie Fauteux Jie He John E. Brazier

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