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The relationship between body mass index and health-related quality of life: comparing the EQ-5D, EuroQol VAS and SF-6D

The relationship between body mass index and health-related quality of life: comparing the EQ-5D, EuroQol VAS and SF-6D
The relationship between body mass index and health-related quality of life: comparing the EQ-5D, EuroQol VAS and SF-6D

Background: no other studies have compared the relationship between body mass index (BMI) and health-related quality of life (HRQL) on more than one utility measure. Estimating the HRQL effects of obesity on a (common) utility scale enables the relative cost-effectiveness of interventions designed to alleviate obesity to be estimated.

Objective: to examine the relationship between BMI and HRQL according to the EQ-5D, EuroQol visual analogue scale (EQ-VAS) and SF-6D.

Methods: patients aged >/=45 years at one UK general practice were asked to complete the EQ-5D, EQ-VAS, SF-36 questionnaire (used to derive the SF-6D), and information on their characteristics and co-morbidity. Body mass index was categorized according to the World Health Organization (WHO) recommendations. Regression analysis was used to compare the HRQL of normal BMI patients to the HRQL of patients in other BMI categories, while controlling for patient characteristics and co-morbidity.

Results: a total of 1865 patients responded (67%), mean BMI 26.0 kg/m(2), 16% obese (BMI>/=30). Patients with back pain, hip pain, knee pain, asthma, diabetes or osteoarthritis were also significantly more likely to be obese. After controlling for other factors, compared to normal BMI patients, obese patients had a lower HRQL according to the EQ-5D (P<0.01), EQ-VAS (P<0.001) and SF-6D (P<0.001). Pre-obese patients were not estimated to have a significantly lower HRQL, and underweight patients were only estimated to have a significantly lower HRQL according to the SF-6D. These results arose because, on the EQ-5D, obese patients were found to have significantly more problems with mobility and pain, compared to physical functioning, social functioning and role limitations on the SF-6D. Whereas, according to the SF-6D, underweight patients had significantly more problems on the dimension of role limitation.

Conclusions: the EQ-5D, EQ-VAS and SF-6D were in agreement that, relative to a normal BMI, obesity is associated with a lower HRQL, even after controlling for patient characteristics and co-morbidity. These three measures are thereby sensitive to the HRQL effects of obesity and can be used to estimate the cost-effectiveness of interventions designed to alleviate obesity.

age distribution, aged, aged, 80 and over, arthritis/epidemiology, asthma/epidemiology, body mass index, cardiovascular diseases/epidemiology, comorbidity, diabetes mellitus/epidemiology, female, humans, male, middle aged, neoplasms/epidemiology, obesity/epidemiology, pain/epidemiology, quality of life, sex distribution, smoking/epidemiology, surveys and questionnaires, United Kingdom/epidemiology
0307-0565
189-96
Sach, T.
5c09256f-ebed-4d14-853a-181f6c92d6f2
Barton, G.
bf3455b3-9bee-4af6-94e8-930b2a383b33
Doherty, M.
c02b861b-6085-4194-80ef-f4cd430fa45a
Muir, K.R.
4703d677-d4f5-4386-aa1e-2de40e31354f
Jenkinson, C.
a73382e1-230b-4668-a8a3-5b95a62abdc4
Avery, A.J.
ba667df1-c7e8-4812-855c-8f5d8c37ed86
Sach, T.
5c09256f-ebed-4d14-853a-181f6c92d6f2
Barton, G.
bf3455b3-9bee-4af6-94e8-930b2a383b33
Doherty, M.
c02b861b-6085-4194-80ef-f4cd430fa45a
Muir, K.R.
4703d677-d4f5-4386-aa1e-2de40e31354f
Jenkinson, C.
a73382e1-230b-4668-a8a3-5b95a62abdc4
Avery, A.J.
ba667df1-c7e8-4812-855c-8f5d8c37ed86

Sach, T., Barton, G., Doherty, M., Muir, K.R., Jenkinson, C. and Avery, A.J. (2006) The relationship between body mass index and health-related quality of life: comparing the EQ-5D, EuroQol VAS and SF-6D. International Journal of Obesity, 31 (1), 189-96. (doi:10.1038/sj.ijo.0803365).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Background: no other studies have compared the relationship between body mass index (BMI) and health-related quality of life (HRQL) on more than one utility measure. Estimating the HRQL effects of obesity on a (common) utility scale enables the relative cost-effectiveness of interventions designed to alleviate obesity to be estimated.

Objective: to examine the relationship between BMI and HRQL according to the EQ-5D, EuroQol visual analogue scale (EQ-VAS) and SF-6D.

Methods: patients aged >/=45 years at one UK general practice were asked to complete the EQ-5D, EQ-VAS, SF-36 questionnaire (used to derive the SF-6D), and information on their characteristics and co-morbidity. Body mass index was categorized according to the World Health Organization (WHO) recommendations. Regression analysis was used to compare the HRQL of normal BMI patients to the HRQL of patients in other BMI categories, while controlling for patient characteristics and co-morbidity.

Results: a total of 1865 patients responded (67%), mean BMI 26.0 kg/m(2), 16% obese (BMI>/=30). Patients with back pain, hip pain, knee pain, asthma, diabetes or osteoarthritis were also significantly more likely to be obese. After controlling for other factors, compared to normal BMI patients, obese patients had a lower HRQL according to the EQ-5D (P<0.01), EQ-VAS (P<0.001) and SF-6D (P<0.001). Pre-obese patients were not estimated to have a significantly lower HRQL, and underweight patients were only estimated to have a significantly lower HRQL according to the SF-6D. These results arose because, on the EQ-5D, obese patients were found to have significantly more problems with mobility and pain, compared to physical functioning, social functioning and role limitations on the SF-6D. Whereas, according to the SF-6D, underweight patients had significantly more problems on the dimension of role limitation.

Conclusions: the EQ-5D, EQ-VAS and SF-6D were in agreement that, relative to a normal BMI, obesity is associated with a lower HRQL, even after controlling for patient characteristics and co-morbidity. These three measures are thereby sensitive to the HRQL effects of obesity and can be used to estimate the cost-effectiveness of interventions designed to alleviate obesity.

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More information

Accepted/In Press date: 24 March 2006
e-pub ahead of print date: 9 May 2006
Keywords: age distribution, aged, aged, 80 and over, arthritis/epidemiology, asthma/epidemiology, body mass index, cardiovascular diseases/epidemiology, comorbidity, diabetes mellitus/epidemiology, female, humans, male, middle aged, neoplasms/epidemiology, obesity/epidemiology, pain/epidemiology, quality of life, sex distribution, smoking/epidemiology, surveys and questionnaires, United Kingdom/epidemiology

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 478173
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/478173
ISSN: 0307-0565
PURE UUID: f24987f4-a2a0-46e2-aea4-de3ad5ce2f78
ORCID for T. Sach: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-8098-9220

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Date deposited: 23 Jun 2023 17:00
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 04:19

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Contributors

Author: T. Sach ORCID iD
Author: G. Barton
Author: M. Doherty
Author: K.R. Muir
Author: C. Jenkinson
Author: A.J. Avery

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