Hwang Seungyoung, Jayadevappa Ravishankar, Zee Jarcy, Zivin Kara, Bogner Hillary R, Raue Patrick J, Bruce Martha L, Reynolds Charles F, Gallo Joseph J
Department of Mental Health, Bloomberg School of Public Health, Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, MD.
Department of Psychiatry, Perelman School of Medicine, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, PA.
Am J Geriatr Psychiatry. 2015 Jul;23(7):726-34. doi: 10.1016/j.jagp.2014.08.009. Epub 2014 Aug 27.
To identify patient characteristics associated with concordance of Medicare claims with clinically identified depression.
The authors studied a cohort of 742 older primary care patients linked to Medicare claims data using the Structured Clinical Interview for Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, Fourth Edition major depressive disorder and clinically significant minor depression.
Among 474 patients with depression, 198 patients had a Medicare claim for depression (sensitivity: 42%; 95% confidence interval [CI]: 37%-46%). Among 268 patients who did not meet criteria for depression, 235 patients did not have a Medicare claim for depression (specificity: 88%; 95% CI: 83%-91%). After adjustment for demographic and clinical characteristics, non-white participants were nearly twice as likely not to have Medicare claims for depression among patients who met criteria for depression ("false negatives"). Smoking status, depression severity (Hamilton Depression Rating Scale), cardiovascular disease, and more primary care physician office visits were also significantly associated with decreased odds to be false negatives. In contrast, after covariate adjustment, white race and chronic pulmonary disease were associated with increased odds of a Medicare claim for depression among patients who did not meet criteria for depression ("false positives"). Using weights based on the screened sample, the positive predictive value of a Medicare claim for depression was 66% (95% CI [63%, 69%]), whereas the negative predictive value was 77% (95% CI [76%, 78%]).
Investigators using Medicare data to study depression must recognize that diagnoses of depression from Medicare data may be biased by patient ethnicity and the presence of medical comorbidity.
确定与医疗保险索赔记录和临床确诊抑郁症相符的患者特征。
作者研究了一组742名老年初级保健患者,这些患者通过《精神疾病诊断与统计手册》第四版中重度抑郁症和具有临床意义的轻度抑郁症的结构化临床访谈与医疗保险索赔数据相关联。
在474名抑郁症患者中,198名患者有抑郁症的医疗保险索赔记录(敏感性:42%;95%置信区间[CI]:37%-46%)。在268名不符合抑郁症标准的患者中,235名患者没有抑郁症的医疗保险索赔记录(特异性:88%;95%CI:83%-91%)。在对人口统计学和临床特征进行调整后,在符合抑郁症标准的患者中(“假阴性”),非白人参与者没有抑郁症医疗保险索赔记录的可能性几乎是非白人参与者的两倍。吸烟状况、抑郁严重程度(汉密尔顿抑郁量表)、心血管疾病以及更多的初级保健医生办公室就诊次数也与成为假阴性的几率降低显著相关。相比之下,在进行协变量调整后,白人种族和慢性肺病与不符合抑郁症标准的患者(“假阳性)中有抑郁症医疗保险索赔记录的几率增加相关。使用基于筛查样本的权重,抑郁症医疗保险索赔记录的阳性预测值为66%(95%CI[63%,69%]),而阴性预测值为77%(95%CI[76%,78%])。
使用医疗保险数据研究抑郁症的研究人员必须认识到,医疗保险数据中的抑郁症诊断可能会受到患者种族和合并症的影响而产生偏差。