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Higher diet quality is associated with short and long-term benefits on SF-6D health state utilities: a 5-year cohort study in an international sample of people with multiple sclerosis

Version 2 2024-07-14, 23:04
Version 1 2023-05-21, 16:30
journal contribution
posted on 2024-07-14, 23:04 authored by H Kirkland, Julie CampbellJulie Campbell, J Reece, N Nag, Y Probst, S Neate, A De Livera, G Jelinek, S Simpson-Yap

Background/purpose: Health state utilities (HSU) are a subjective measure of an individual's health-related quality of life (HRQoL), adjusted by societal or patient relative preference weights for living in different states of health-related quality of life (HRQoL), derived from patient-reported responses to multi-attribute utility instrument (MAUI), and can be used as inputs for cost-utility analyses and in clinical assessment. This research assessed associations of diet with subsequent HSU in a large international cohort of people living with multiple sclerosis (MS), a progressive autoimmune condition of the central nervous system.

Methods: HSUs were generated from responses to Short-Form Six-Dimension (SF-6D) MAUI, and quality-of-the-diet by Diet Habits Questionnaire (DHQ). Cross-sectional, and short- and long-term prospective associations of DHQ with HSU evaluated by linear regression at 2.5- and 5-years. Pooled prospective associations between DHQ and HSU evaluated using linear and quantile regression. Analyses adjusted for relevant demographic and clinical covariates.

Results: Among 839 participants, baseline DHQ scores showed short- and long-term associations with subsequent HSU, each 10-unit increase in total DHQ score associated with 0.008-0.012 higher HSU (out of 1.00). These associations were dose-dependent, those in the top two quartiles of baseline DHQ scores having 0.01-0.03 higher HSU at follow-up, 0.03 being the threshold for a minimally clinically important difference. Fat, fiber, and fruit/vegetable DHQ subscores were most strongly and consistently associated with better HSU outcomes. However, baseline meat and dairy consumption were associated with 0.01-0.02 lower HSU at subsequent follow-up.

Conclusions: A higher quality-of-the-diet showed robust prospective relationships with higher HSUs 2.5- and 5-years later, substantiating previous cross-sectional relationships in this cohort. Subject to replication, these results suggest interventions to improve the quality-of-the-diet may be effective to improve HRQoL in people living with MS.

Funding

Multiple Sclerosis Australia

History

Publication title

Quality of Life Research

Volume

32

Issue

7

Article number

ePub ahead of print Feb 2023

Number

ePub ahead of print Feb 2023

Pagination

1883-1896:14

ISSN

0962-9343

Department/School

Menzies Institute for Medical Research

Publisher

Kluwer Academic Publ

Publication status

  • Published

Place of publication

Van Godewijckstraat 30, Dordrecht, Netherlands, 3311 Gz

Rights statement

© The Author(s) 2023

Socio-economic Objectives

200202 Evaluation of health outcomes

UN Sustainable Development Goals

3 Good Health and Well Being

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