New York City Department of Health and Mental Hygiene, World Trade Center Health Registry, 30-30 47th Avenue, Room 414, Long Island City, NY, 11101, USA.
BMC Med Res Methodol. 2021 Aug 10;21(1):162. doi: 10.1186/s12874-021-01358-y.
Although many studies have investigated agreement between survey and hospitalization data for disease prevalence, it is unknown whether exposure-chronic disease associations vary based on data collection method. We investigated agreement between self-report and administrative data for the following: 1) disease prevalence, and 2) the accuracy of self-reported hospitalization in the last 12 months, and 3) the association of seven chronic diseases (rheumatoid arthritis, hypertension, heart attack, stroke, asthma, diabetes, hyperlipidemia) with four measures of 9/11 exposure.
Enrollees of the World Trade Center Health Registry who resided in New York State were included (N = 18,206). Hospitalization data for chronic diseases were obtained from the New York State Planning and Research Cooperative System (SPARCS). Prevalence for each disease and concordance measures (kappa, sensitivity, specificity, positive agreement, and negative agreement) were calculated. In addition, the associations of the seven chronic diseases with the four measures of exposure were evaluated using logistic regression.
Self-report disease prevalence ranged from moderately high (40.5% for hyperlipidemia) to low (3.8% for heart attack). Self-report prevalence was at least twice that obtained from administrative data for all seven chronic diseases. Kappa ranged from 0.35 (stroke) to 0.04 (rheumatoid arthritis). Self-reported hospitalizations within the last 12 months showed little overlap with actual hospitalization data. Agreement for exposure-disease associations was good over the twenty-eight exposure-disease pairs studied.
Agreement was good for exposure-disease associations, modest for disease prevalence, and poor for self-reported hospitalizations. Neither self-report nor administrative data can be treated as the "gold standard." Which source to use depends on the availability and context of data, and the disease under study.
尽管许多研究已经调查了疾病流行率的调查和住院数据之间的一致性,但尚不清楚暴露-慢性疾病的关联是否因数据收集方法而异。我们调查了以下方面的自我报告和行政数据之间的一致性:1)疾病流行率,2)过去 12 个月内自我报告住院的准确性,以及 3)七种慢性疾病(类风湿关节炎、高血压、心脏病发作、中风、哮喘、糖尿病、高脂血症)与四项 9/11 暴露指标的关联。
纳入世界贸易中心健康登记处居住在纽约州的参与者(N=18206)。慢性病住院数据来自纽约州规划和研究合作系统(SPARCS)。计算了每种疾病的流行率和一致性测量值(kappa、敏感性、特异性、阳性一致性和阴性一致性)。此外,使用逻辑回归评估了七种慢性疾病与四项暴露指标之间的关联。
自我报告的疾病流行率从高(高脂血症为 40.5%)到低(心脏病发作为 3.8%)不等。自我报告的流行率至少是七种慢性疾病中所有疾病从行政数据中获得的流行率的两倍。kappa 范围从 0.35(中风)到 0.04(类风湿关节炎)。过去 12 个月内自我报告的住院情况与实际住院数据几乎没有重叠。在所研究的 28 个暴露-疾病对中,暴露-疾病关联的一致性良好。
暴露-疾病关联的一致性良好,疾病流行率的一致性适中,自我报告的住院情况的一致性较差。自我报告和行政数据都不能被视为“金标准”。应使用哪种来源取决于数据的可用性和背景,以及研究的疾病。