Mapping the Shah-modified Barthel Index to the Health Utility Index Mark III by the Mean Rank Method

Qual Life Res. 2019 Dec;28(12):3177-3185. doi: 10.1007/s11136-019-02254-1. Epub 2019 Jul 27.

Abstract

Purpose: To map the Shah-modified Barthel Index (SBI) to the Health Utility Index Mark III (HUI-3) in stroke patients, and to compare the performance of a recently developed method called the Mean Rank Method (MRM) against a popular method, the Ordinary Least Squares (OLS) method.

Methods: A cohort of 473 patients who had their first clinical stroke diagnosis and hospital admission and were assessed using the SBI and HUI-3 at 3 months and/or 12 months post-admission. Observations were split to form a training dataset (N = 473) and a validation dataset (N = 245).

Results: In the training dataset, the MRM using SBI total score as the predictor produced a mapped utility distribution that closely resembled the observed utility distribution. It had almost no shrinkage of the standard deviation (P = 0.542), whereas the OLS using SBI total score and SBI item scores under-estimated the standard deviation by 28% and 26%, respectively (each P < 0.001). The MRM mapping gave better fit in terms of smaller mean absolute error and larger intra-class correlation than the two versions of OLS mapping, whereas the OLS gave smaller mean-squared errors than the MRM. Multivariate regression analysis showed that the use of OLS-mapped utilities tended to under-estimate both the mean utility of people who had no comorbidity and the utility-comorbidity association as compared to the observed utility-comorbidity pattern although the differences did not reach statistical significance (each P > 0.05). The MRM-mapped utility showed utility-comorbidity pattern more similar to the observed. Similar findings were obtained from the validation dataset.

Conclusions: The MRM performed well. Mapping functions are available to map the SBI to the HUI-3 Utility Index.

Keywords: Activities of daily living; Barthel Index; Health Utility Index Mark III; Health utility; Mapping; Stroke.

Publication types

  • Comparative Study

MeSH terms

  • Activities of Daily Living / psychology*
  • Female
  • Health Status*
  • Humans
  • Least-Squares Analysis
  • Male
  • Middle Aged
  • Quality of Life / psychology*
  • Stroke / psychology*
  • Surveys and Questionnaires*