Cohen Jacqueline M, Wood Mollie E, Hernandez-Diaz Sonia, Nordeng Hedvig
Department of Epidemiology, Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health, Boston, MA, USA.
Pharmacoepidemiology and Drug Safety Research Group, School of Pharmacy, University of Oslo, Oslo, Norway.
Pharmacoepidemiol Drug Saf. 2018 Apr;27(4):413-421. doi: 10.1002/pds.4411. Epub 2018 Feb 28.
Father's medication use is of interest in fertility studies and as negative control exposures in pregnancy medication safety studies. We sought to compare self-report to prescription records to understand how reliably each of these sources of information may be used.
We compared self-reported medication use in the 6 months prior to pregnancy from fathers participating in the Norwegian Mother and Child Cohort Study to records of dispensed prescriptions from the Norwegian Prescription Database that overlapped in time. Medications from 3 main categories were assessed: prescription medications used chronically, prescription medications used episodically, and over-the-counter/prescription medications (predominantly obtained without prescription). We calculated agreement between self-report and dispensing records using Cohen's kappa statistic.
We included 42 848 pregnancies with the father's prescription data available for the 9 months before pregnancy. Prescription medications used chronically including antiepileptics, antipsychotics, and antidepressants showed substantial agreement between self-report and prescription records: kappa statistics 0.87, 0.63, and 0.74, respectively. Prescription medications used episodically like anti-infectives, opioids, anxiolytics, and hypnotics and sedatives showed worse agreement: kappa 0.19, 0.32, 0.40, 0.32. Over-the-counter/prescription medications like paracetamol and nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs had slight agreement: kappa 0.02 and 0.20.
There is good agreement between paternal self-report and prescription data for prescribed medications used chronically and substantially less for medications used episodically. Suboptimal agreement for episodic medications suggests poor recall (for questionnaires) or false positives due to noncompliance (prescription data). Not surprisingly, use of medications available both with and without a prescription is not well captured using prescription databases alone.
父亲的用药情况在生育力研究以及孕期用药安全性研究中作为阴性对照暴露因素受到关注。我们试图比较自我报告与处方记录,以了解这两种信息来源的可靠程度。
我们将参与挪威母婴队列研究的父亲在孕前6个月自我报告的用药情况与挪威处方数据库中与之时间重叠的配药记录进行了比较。评估了3大类药物:长期使用的处方药、偶尔使用的处方药以及非处方/处方药(主要无需处方获取)。我们使用科恩kappa统计量计算自我报告与配药记录之间的一致性。
我们纳入了42848例妊娠,其父亲在孕前9个月的处方数据可用。长期使用的处方药,包括抗癫痫药、抗精神病药和抗抑郁药,自我报告与处方记录之间显示出高度一致性:kappa统计量分别为0.87、0.63和0.74。偶尔使用的处方药,如抗感染药、阿片类药物、抗焦虑药以及催眠药和镇静剂,一致性较差:kappa分别为0.19、0.32、0.40、0.32。非处方/处方药,如对乙酰氨基酚和非甾体抗炎药,一致性轻微:kappa分别为0.02和0.20。
父亲自我报告与长期使用的处方药的处方数据之间一致性良好,而偶尔使用的药物一致性则低得多。偶尔使用药物的一致性欠佳表明回忆情况不佳(针对问卷)或因不依从导致的假阳性(处方数据)。毫不奇怪,仅使用处方数据库无法很好地掌握有无处方均可获取的药物的使用情况。