Jolley Rachel J, Liang Zhiying, Peng Mingkai, Pendharkar Sachin R, Tsai Willis, Chen Guanmin, Eastwood Cathy A, Quan Hude, Ronksley Paul E
Department of Community Health Sciences, Cumming School of Medicine, University of Calgary, Calgary, Alberta, Canada.
Department of Medicine, Cumming School of Medicine, University of Calgary, Calgary, Alberta, Canada.
Int J Popul Data Sci. 2018 Jul 10;3(1):448. doi: 10.23889/ijpds.v3i1.448.
Prevalence, and associated morbidity and mortality of chronic sleep disorders have been limited to small cohort studies, however, administrative data may be used to provide representation of larger population estimates of disease. With no guidelines to inform the identification of cases of sleep disorders in administrative data, the objective of this study was to develop and validate a set of ICD-codes used to define sleep disorders including narcolepsy, insomnia, and obstructive sleep apnea (OSA) in administrative data.
A cohort of adult patients, with medical records reviewed by two independent board-certified sleep physicians from a sleep clinic in Calgary, Alberta between January 1, 2009 and December 31, 2011, was used as the reference standard. We developed a general ICD-coded case definition for sleep disorders which included conditions of narcolepsy, insomnia, and OSA using: 1) physician claims data, 2) inpatient visit data, 3) emergency department (ED) and ambulatory care data. We linked the reference standard data and administrative data to examine the validity of different case definitions, calculating estimates of sensitivity, specificity, positive predictive value (PPV), and negative predictive value (NPV).
From a total of 1186 patients from the sleep clinic, 1045 (88.1%) were classified as sleep disorder positive, with 606 (51.1%) diagnosed with OSA, 407 (34.4%) with insomnia, and 59 (5.0%) with narcolepsy. The most frequently used ICD-9 codes were general codes of 307.4 (Nonorganic sleep disorder, unspecified), 780.5 (unspecified sleep disturbance) and ICD-10 codes of G47.8 (other sleep disorders), G47.9 (sleep disorder, unspecified). The best definition for identifying a sleep disorder was an ICD code (from physician claims) 2 years prior and 1 year post sleep clinic visit: sensitivity 79.2%, specificity 28.4%, PPV 89.1%, and NPV 15.6%. ICD codes from ED/ambulatory care data provided similar diagnostic performance when at least 2 codes appeared in a time period of 2 years prior and 1 year post sleep clinic visit: sensitivity 71.9%, specificity 54.6%, PPV 92.1%, and NPV 20.8%. The inpatient data yielded poor results in all tested ICD code combinations.
Sleep disorders in administrative data can be identified mainly through physician claims data and with some being determined through outpatient/ambulatory care data ICD codes, however these are poorly coded within inpatient data sources. This may be a function of how sleep disorders are diagnosed and/or reported by physicians in inpatient and outpatient settings within medical records. Future work to optimize administrative data case definitions through data linkage are needed.
慢性睡眠障碍的患病率以及相关的发病率和死亡率此前仅限于小型队列研究,然而,行政数据可用于提供更大规模人群疾病估计的代表性数据。由于在行政数据中识别睡眠障碍病例尚无指导方针,本研究的目的是开发并验证一组用于在行政数据中定义睡眠障碍的国际疾病分类(ICD)编码,这些睡眠障碍包括发作性睡病、失眠和阻塞性睡眠呼吸暂停(OSA)。
选取一组成年患者作为参考标准,这些患者的病历由来自艾伯塔省卡尔加里市一家睡眠诊所的两名独立的具有董事会认证的睡眠医生在2009年1月1日至2011年12月31日期间进行审查。我们使用以下数据开发了一个用于睡眠障碍的通用ICD编码病例定义,其中包括发作性睡病、失眠和OSA的情况:1)医生索赔数据;2)住院就诊数据;3)急诊科(ED)和门诊护理数据。我们将参考标准数据与行政数据相链接,以检验不同病例定义的有效性,计算敏感性、特异性、阳性预测值(PPV)和阴性预测值(NPV)估计值。
在睡眠诊所的1186名患者中,1045名(88.1%)被归类为睡眠障碍阳性,其中606名(51.1%)被诊断为OSA,407名(34.4%)患有失眠,59名(5.0%)患有发作性睡病。最常用的ICD - 9编码是307.4(未特指的非器质性睡眠障碍)、780.5(未特指的睡眠障碍)等通用编码,以及ICD - 10编码中的G47.8(其他睡眠障碍)、G47.9(未特指的睡眠障碍)。识别睡眠障碍的最佳定义是睡眠诊所就诊前2年和就诊后1年的ICD编码(来自医生索赔):敏感性79.2%,特异性28.4%,PPV 89.1%,NPV 15.6%。当在睡眠诊所就诊前2年和就诊后1年的时间段内至少出现2个编码时,来自ED/门诊护理数据的ICD编码提供了相似的诊断性能:敏感性71.9%,特异性54.6%,PPV 92.1%,NPV 20.8%。在所有测试的ICD编码组合中,住院数据产生的结果较差。
行政数据中的睡眠障碍主要可通过医生索赔数据识别,部分可通过门诊/门诊护理数据ICD编码确定,但在住院数据源中编码不佳。这可能是医生在病历的住院和门诊环境中诊断和/或报告睡眠障碍的方式所导致的。未来需要通过数据链接来优化行政数据病例定义的工作。