Schwarcz Sandra, Hessol Nancy A, Spinelli Matthew A, Hsu Ling Chin, Wlodarczyk Daniel, Tulsky Jacqueline, Newman Meg D, Buchbinder Susan P
7152 San Francisco Department of Public Health, San Francisco, CA, USA.
8785 Department of Clinical Pharmacy and Department of Medicine, University of California, San Francisco, San Francisco, CA, USA.
Public Health Rep. 2021 Sep-Oct;136(5):595-602. doi: 10.1177/0033354920977840. Epub 2021 Feb 4.
Inaccuracies in cause-of-death information in death certificates can reduce the validity of national death statistics and result in poor targeting of resources to reduce morbidity and mortality in people with HIV. Our objective was to measure the sensitivity, specificity, and agreement between multiple causes of deaths from death certificates obtained from the National Death Index (NDI) and causes determined by expert physician review.
Physician specialists determined the cause of death using information collected from the medical records of 50 randomly selected HIV-infected people who died in San Francisco from July 1, 2016, through May 31, 2017. Using expert review as the gold standard, we measured sensitivity, specificity, and agreement.
The NDI had a sensitivity of 53.9% and a specificity of 66.7% for HIV deaths. The NDI had a moderate sensitivity for non-AIDS-related infectious diseases and non-AIDS-related cancers (70.6% and 75.0%, respectively) and high specificity for these causes (100.0% and 94.7%, respectively). The NDI had low sensitivity and high specificity for substance abuse (27.3% and 100.0%, respectively), heart disease (58.3% and 86.8%, respectively), hepatitis B/C (33.3% and 97.7%, respectively), and mental illness (50.0% and 97.8%, respectively). The measure of agreement between expert review and the NDI was lowest for HIV (κ = 0.20); moderate for heart disease (κ = 0.45) and hepatitis B/C (κ = 0.40); high for non-AIDS-related infectious diseases (κ = 0.76) and non-AIDS-related cancers (κ = 0.72); and low for all other causes of death (κ < 0.35).
Our findings support education and training of health care providers to improve the accuracy of cause-of-death information on death certificates.
死亡证明书中死因信息的不准确会降低国家死亡统计数据的有效性,并导致用于降低艾滋病毒感染者发病率和死亡率的资源分配目标不佳。我们的目标是衡量从国家死亡指数(NDI)获得的死亡证明书中多种死因与专家医生审查确定的死因之间的敏感性、特异性和一致性。
内科专家利用从2016年7月1日至2017年5月31日在旧金山死亡的50名随机选择的艾滋病毒感染者的病历中收集的信息确定死因。以专家审查为金标准,我们测量了敏感性、特异性和一致性。
NDI对艾滋病毒死亡的敏感性为53.9%,特异性为66.7%。NDI对非艾滋病相关传染病和非艾滋病相关癌症具有中等敏感性(分别为70.6%和75.0%),对这些病因具有高特异性(分别为100.0%和94.7%)。NDI对药物滥用(分别为27.3%和100.0%)、心脏病(分别为58.3%和86.8%)、乙型/丙型肝炎(分别为33.3%和97.7%)和精神疾病(分别为50.0%和97.8%)的敏感性较低,特异性较高。专家审查与NDI之间的一致性衡量在艾滋病毒方面最低(κ = 0.20);心脏病(κ = 0.45)和乙型/丙型肝炎(κ = 0.40)为中等;非艾滋病相关传染病(κ = 0.76)和非艾滋病相关癌症(κ = 0.72)为高;所有其他死因均为低(κ < 0.35)。
我们的研究结果支持对医疗保健提供者进行教育和培训,以提高死亡证明书中死因信息的准确性。