Determination of quality of life-related health utilities for surgical complications in ovarian cancer

Rudy S. Suidan, Charlotte C. Sun, Amy K. Schneider, Karen H. Lu, Sharon H. Giordano, Larissa A. Meyer

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Objective: To assess the health state utilities of ovarian cancer patients, clinicians, and non-cancer controls regarding surgical complications in ovarian cancer. Methods: Utilities for 14 surgical complications were assessed from patients with recently diagnosed or recurrent ovarian cancer, clinicians, and non-cancer controls using the visual analog scale (VAS) and time trade-off (TTO) methods. Health state utilities were converted to a 0-to-1 scale, where 0 represents the least favorable outcome and 1 represents the most favorable outcome. Results: Fifty patients, 50 clinicians, and 50 controls participated. Median VAS scores were lower than TTO scores across all groups (p < 0.01). Patients viewed ‘bleeding requiring transfusion’ most favorably (VAS utility 0.75), followed in order by less favorable utility scores for hernia, thromboembolism, pleural effusion, abscess, ileus/bowel obstruction, wound infection, bowel obstruction requiring surgery, anastomotic leak requiring drain, temporary ostomy, anastomotic leak requiring surgery, genito-urinary fistula, permanent ostomy, and genito-intestinal fistula (VAS utility 0.2). Overall, clinicians perceived complications more favorably than patients by VAS (overall utility score 0.49 vs 0.43, p < 0.01), but not by the TTO. There were no differences in overall utility scores between patients and controls. Patients who had not experienced certain surgical complications had less favorable scores than patients who did (utility score for ostomy = 0.2 for patients without ostomy vs. 0.7 for patients with ostomy, p = 0.02). Conclusions: This study establishes health state utilities for surgical complications associated with ovarian cancer. These utilities can be used in future cost-effectiveness evaluations to determine quality-adjusted outcomes and may help in counseling patients during the shared decision-making process.

Original languageEnglish (US)
Pages (from-to)101-107
Number of pages7
JournalGynecologic oncology
Volume185
DOIs
StatePublished - Jun 2024

Keywords

  • Health state
  • Ovarian cancer
  • Quality of life
  • Surgical complications
  • Utility

ASJC Scopus subject areas

  • Oncology
  • Obstetrics and Gynecology

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