Minimal Clinically Important Differences MCID

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Minimal Clinically Important Differences MCID

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Title: Minimal Clinically Important Differences MCID


1
Minimal Clinically Important Differences (MCID)
Robert M. Kaplan (some slides from Ron
Hays) February 13, 2006
2
Responsiveness to Change
  • HRQOL measures should be responsive to
  • interventions that change HRQOL
  • Evaluating responsiveness requires assessing
  • HRQOL relative to an external indicator of
    change (anchor)

3
Two Essential Elements
  • 1. External (not HRQOL measure being evaluated)
    indicator of change (Anchor)
  • 2. Amount of HRQOL change among those determined
    to have changed on anchor, relative to noise
    (variance).

4
Kinds of Anchors
  • Self-report
  • Clinician or other report
  • Clinical parameter
  • Clinical intervention

5
Self-Report Anchor (A)
  • Overall has there been any change in your asthma
    since the beginning of the study?
  • Much improved Moderately improved Minimally
    improved
  • No change
  • Much worse Moderately worse Minimally worse

6
Examples of Other Anchors
  • Clinician report
  • How is Jans physical health now compared to 4
    weeks ago?
  • Clinical parameter
  • Change from CDC Stage A to B
  • Became seizure free
  • Clinical intervention
  • Before and after Prozac

7
Change and Responsiveness in PCS Depends on
Treatment
8
Change and Responsiveness in MCS Depends on
Treatment
9
Magnitude of HRQOL Change Should Parallel
Underlying Change
10
Minimal Important Difference (MID)
Some differences between groups or over time may
be so small in magnitude that they are not
important. Smallest difference in score that is
worth caring about (important). Change large
enough for a clinician to base treatment
decisions upon it.
11
Two Essential Elements
1. Indicator (not HRQOL measure being evaluated)
of minimal change (Anchor) 2. Amount of HRQOL
change among those determined to have changed on
anchor.
12
Example Anchor (1)
People who report a minimal change How is
your physical health now compared to 4 weeks ago?
Much improved Moderately Improved
Minimally Improved No Change Minimally
Worse Moderately Worse Much Worse
13
MID Varies by Anchor
  • 693 RA clinical trial participants evaluated at
    baseline and 6-weeks post-treatment.
  • Five anchors 1) patient global self-report 2)
    physician global report 3) pain self-report 4)
    joint swelling 5) joint tenderness
  • Kosinski, M. et al. (2000). Determining
    minimally important changes in generic and
    disease-specific health-related quality of life
    questionnaires in clinical trials of rheumatoid
    arthritis. Arthritis and Rheumatism, 43,
    1478-1487.

14
Changes in SF-36 Scores Associatedwith Minimal
Change in Anchors
15
Samsa et al. (1999, p. 149) said
  • MID for SF-36 is typically in the range of 3 to
    5 points (p. 149). .09-gt0.28 ES
  • Samsa, G., Edelman, D., Rothman, M. L., Williams,
    G. R., Lipscomb, J., Matchar, D.
    Pharmacoeconomics, 15, 141-155 1999.

16
MID Determination Complicated By Cumulative
Change Over time

Baseline 42 Year 4 36 Note 4-year decline in
PCS among US seniors, 1990-94. -gt 1.5 points
per year (0.15 SD)

17
MID Varies by Starting Position
  • Same retrospective report of change associated
    with bigger prospective change for those with
    more room to change
  • Among those who said their physical health was
    somewhat worse, change ranged from 26 points to
    3 points for people with high (81-100) versus
    low (0-20) baseline physical health (Baker et
    al., 1997, Medical Care).

18
Group Average is Different from Individual Change
  • Average change collapses across individual
    responses.
  • Is inference about minimum amount of change that
    is important for individuals based on a group
    average reasonable?
  • What if scale score improved by 4 points for half
    the people and 0 points for the other half? Is
    the MID 2 or 4?

19
Example Use of Self-Report Anchor in COPD
  • Compared to Jack, my ability to walk is
  • Much better Somewhat better A little bit
    better About the same A little bit worse
    Somewhat worse Much worse
  • Determined how much actual walking distance had
    to differ, on average, for patients to rate
    themselves as walking either a little bit better
    or a little bit worse.
  • Redelmeier, D. A. et al., 1997, Am J Respir Crit
    Care Med

20
Example with Multiple Anchors
  • 693 RA clinical trial participants evaluated at
    baseline and 6-weeks post-treatment.
  • Five anchors
  • 1) patient global self-report
  • 2) physician global report
  • 3) pain self-report
  • 4) joint swelling
  • 5) joint tenderness
  • Kosinski, M. et al. (2000). Determining
    minimally important changes in generic and
    disease-specific health-related quality of life
    questionnaires in clinical trials of rheumatoid
    arthritis. Arthritis and Rheumatism, 43,
    1478-1487.

21
Patient and Physician global reports
  • How the patient is doing, considering all the
    ways that RA affects him/here?
  • Very good (asymptomatic and no limitation of
    normal activities)
  • Good (mild symptoms and no limitation of normal
    activities)
  • Fair (moderate symptoms and limitation of normal
    activities)
  • Poor (severe symptoms and inability to carry out
    most normal activities)
  • Very poor (very severe symptoms that are
    intolerable and inability to carry out normal
    activities)

22
Pain self-report
  • 10 centimeter visual analog scale
  • 0 no pain, 10 severe pain

23
Threshold on Self-Report and Physician Report
Anchors Used for MID estimation
  • Patient and physician global reports
  • Improvement of 1 level over time.
  • Pain self-report
  • Improvement of 1-20 over time.

24
Joint swelling and tenderness anchors
  • Number of swollen and tender joints
  • Threshold for MID estimation 1-20 improvement
    over time

25
Recommendations
  • Use multiple anchors
  • Use anchors that represent minimal change
  • Report average across anchors and studies, range,
    and SD
  • Consider that it can be easier to conclude that a
    difference is clearly or obviously important than
    it is to say one is always unimportant (grey
    area).

26
Appendix Terminology
  • Minimally Important Difference (MID)
  • Minimal difference (MD)
  • Minimally Detectable Difference (MDD)
  • Clinically Important Difference (CID)

27
Value Depends on Cost
  • A small positive change has greater value if it
    costs less.
  • Importance of HRQOL change depends on what it
    costs to produce it.

28
Summary
Identification of MID aids interpretation by
providing familiar anchors to unfamiliar
units. Trying to give a single point estimate is
too simplistic. Bounded estimates are necessary
given the uncertainty.
29
So How Big Are Different Changes?
  • Effect size benchmarks
  • Small 0.20-gt0.49
  • Moderate 0.50-gt0.79
  • Large 0.80 or above

30
(No Transcript)
31
Example of Preference Approach
  • National Emphysema Treatment Trial (NETT)

32
Subjects
  • 606 male and 387 female participants in the
    National Emphysema Treatment Trial (NETT)

33
Exclusion Criteria
  • characteristics that place them at high risk for
    peri-operative morbidity and/or mortality
  • emphysema felt to be unsuitable for LVRS, and
  • medical conditions or other circumstances that
    make it likely that the patient would be unable
    to complete the trial.

34
Measures Pre-post rehabilitation, 12 months, 24
months
  • Quality of Well being scale (QWB-SA)
  • Medical Outcomes Study 36 Item Short Form (SF36)
  • St. Georges Respiratory Questionnaire (SGRQ)
  • UCSD Shortness of Breath Questionnaire (SOBQ).

35
NETT Survival Result NEJM May 22, 2003
36
NETT
  • Patients were randomly assigned to
  • maximal medical therapy
  • LVRS. Those assigned to LVRS
  • video assisted thoracoscopy (VATS
  • median sternotomy

37
Descriptive Statistics for Change Scores in
Rehabilitation Phase of NETT
38
Change in QOL Measures by QWB change category
39
Change in SOBQ by QWB Catetory
40
Change in SGRQ by QWB Category
41
Change in SF-36 PCS by QWB Category
42
Change in SF-36 MCS by QWB Category
43
Cumulative Mean QALYs Per Person
Years after year 1 discounted at 3 per
year Number alive at end of observation period
NETT
44
(No Transcript)
45
Comparison of Cost/QALY for Different Programs
in COPD (2002 dollars)
46
Conclusions
  • The preference scaling system in generic utility
    based quality of life measures provides a metric
    that is directly interpretable and avoids many of
    the criticisms of MCID measures
  • Quality adjusted life years offer a valuable
    metric for policy analysis.
  • Utility-based measures of health-quality of life
    should gain greater use in COPD outcomes
    research.
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