Interpreting thresholds for a clinically significant change in health status in asthma and COPD
- PMID: 11936514
- DOI: 10.1183/09031936.02.00063702
Interpreting thresholds for a clinically significant change in health status in asthma and COPD
Abstract
Health status (or Health-Related Quality of Life) measurement is an established method for assessing the overall efficacy of treatments for asthma and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD). Such measurements can indicate the potential clinical significance of a treatment's effect. This paper is concerned with methods of estimating the threshold of clinical significance for three widely used health status questionnaires for asthma and COPD: the Asthma Quality of Life Questionnaire, Chronic Respiratory Questionnaire and St George's Respiratory Questionnaire. It discusses the methodology used to obtain such estimates and shows that the estimates appear to be fairly reliable; ie. for a given questionnaire, similar estimates may be obtained in different studies. These empirically derived thresholds are all mean estimates with confidence intervals around them. The presence of these confidence intervals affects the way in which the thresholds may be used to draw inferences concerning the clinical relevance of clinical trial results. A new system of judging the magnitude of clinically significant results is proposed. Finally, an attempt is made to translate these thresholds into scenarios that illustrate what a clinically significant change with treatment may mean to an individual patient.
Comment in
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Minimal clinically significant difference in health status: the thorny path of health status measures?Eur Respir J. 2002 Mar;19(3):390-1. doi: 10.1183/09031936.02.00283402. Eur Respir J. 2002. PMID: 11936512 No abstract available.
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