Kiser A C, Hemmert R, Myrer R, Bucher B T, Eilbeck K, Varner M, Stanford J B, Peterson C M, Pollack A Z, Farland L V, Schliep K C
Department of Biomedical Informatics, University of Utah, Salt Lake City, UT, USA.
Department of Family and Preventative Medicine, University of Utah, Salt Lake City, UT, USA.
Hum Reprod. 2025 Feb 1;40(2):289-295. doi: 10.1093/humrep/deae281.
How do endometriosis diagnoses and subtypes reported in administrative health data compare with surgically confirmed disease?
For endometriosis diagnosis, we observed substantial agreement and high sensitivity and specificity between administrative health data-International Classification of Diseases (ICD) 9 codes-and surgically confirmed diagnoses among participants who underwent gynecologic laparoscopy or laparotomy.
Several studies have assessed the validity of self-reported endometriosis in comparison to medical record reporting, finding strong confirmation. We previously reported high inter- and intra-surgeon agreement for endometriosis diagnosis in the Endometriosis, Natural History, Diagnosis, and Outcomes (ENDO) Study.
STUDY DESIGN, SIZE, DURATION: In this validation study, participants (n = 412) of the Utah operative cohort of the ENDO Study (2007-2009) were linked to medical records from the Utah Population Database (UPDB) to compare endometriosis diagnoses from each source. The UPDB is a unique database containing linked data on over 11 million individuals, including statewide ambulatory and inpatient records, state vital records, and University of Utah Health and Intermountain Healthcare electronic healthcare records, capturing most Utah residents.
PARTICIPANTS/MATERIALS, SETTING, METHODS: The ENDO operative cohort consisted of individuals aged 18-44 years with no prior endometriosis diagnosis who underwent gynecologic laparoscopy or laparotomy for a variety of surgical indications. In total, 173 women were diagnosed with endometriosis based on surgical visualization of disease, 35% with superficial endometriosis, 9% with ovarian endometriomas, and 14% with deep infiltrating endometriosis. Contemporary administrative health data from the UPDB included ICD diagnostic codes from Utah Department of Health in-patient and ambulatory surgery records and University of Utah and Intermountain Health electronic health records.
For endometriosis diagnosis, we found relatively high sensitivity (0.88) and specificity (0.87) and substantial agreement (Kappa [Κ] = 0.74). We found similarly high sensitivity, specificity, and agreement for superficial endometriosis (n = 143, 0.86, 0.83, Κ = 0.65) and ovarian endometriomas (n = 38, 0.82, 0.92, Κ = 0.58). However, deep infiltrating endometriosis (n = 58) had lower sensitivity (0.12) and agreement (Κ = 0.17), with high specificity (0.99).
LIMITATIONS, REASONS FOR CAUTION: Medication prescription data and unstructured data, such as clinical notes, were not included in the UPDB data used for this study. These additional data types could aid in detection of endometriosis. Most participants were white or Asian with Hispanic ethnicity reported 11% of the time, which may limit generalizability to some US states. Additionally, given that participants whose administrative health records we utilized were also part of the ENDO Study, the surgeons may have been more vigilant in diagnostic coding due to the operative forms they completed for the ENDO Study, which may have led to increased validity. However, the codes compared in the UPDB would have been entered by medical coders as part of standard clinical practice.
We observed substantial agreement between administrative health data and surgically confirmed endometriosis diagnoses overall, and for superficial and ovarian endometrioma subtypes. These findings may provide reassurance to researchers using administrative healthcare records to assess risk factors and long-term health outcomes of endometriosis. Our findings corroborate prior research that demonstrates high specificity but low sensitivity for deep infiltrating endometriosis, indicating deep infiltrating endometriosis is not reliably annotated in administrative healthcare data. This suggests that medical record-based deep infiltrating endometriosis diagnoses may be suitable for etiologic studies but not for surveillance or detection studies.
STUDY FUNDING/COMPETING INTEREST(S): The original ENDO Study was funded by the Intramural Research Program, Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Human Development, National Institutes of Health (contracts NO1-DK-6-3428; NO1-DK-6-3427; 10001406-02). We acknowledge partial support for the UPDB through grant P30 CA2014 from the National Cancer Institute, University of Utah and from the University of Utah's program in Personalized Health and Center for Clinical and Translational Science. This research was also supported by the NCRR grant, 'Sharing Statewide Health Data for Genetic Research' (R01 RR021746, G. Mineau, PI) with additional support from the Utah Department of Health and Human Services, University of Utah. Additionally, this research was supported by the Utah Cancer Registry, which is funded by the National Cancer Institute's SEER Program, Contract No. HHSN261201800016I, the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention's National Program of Cancer Registries, Cooperative Agreement No. NU58DP007131, with additional support from the University of Utah and Huntsman Cancer Foundation. Research reported in this publication was also supported by the National Institutes of Health (Award Numbers R01HL164715 [to L.V.F., K.C.S., and A.Z.P.] and K01AG058781 [to K.C.S.]), by the Huntsman Cancer Institute's Breast and Gynecologic Cancers Center, and by the Doris Duke Foundation's COVID-19 Fund to Retain Clinical Scientists funded by the American Heart Association. A.C.K. was supported by Training Grant Number 5T15LM007124 from the National Library of Medicine to K.E. The content is solely the responsibility of the authors and does not necessarily represent the official views of the National Institutes of Health or other sponsors. There are no competing interests among any of the authors.
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行政健康数据中报告的子宫内膜异位症诊断及亚型与手术确诊疾病相比如何?
对于子宫内膜异位症诊断,我们观察到在接受妇科腹腔镜检查或剖腹手术的参与者中,行政健康数据(国际疾病分类(ICD)9编码)与手术确诊诊断之间存在高度一致性、高敏感性和特异性。
多项研究评估了自我报告的子宫内膜异位症与病历报告相比的有效性,结果得到了有力证实。我们之前在子宫内膜异位症、自然史、诊断和结局(ENDO)研究中报告了外科医生之间及内部对于子宫内膜异位症诊断的高度一致性。
研究设计、规模、持续时间:在这项验证研究中,ENDO研究(2007 - 2009年)犹他州手术队列的参与者(n = 412)与犹他州人口数据库(UPDB)的病历相关联,以比较来自每个来源的子宫内膜异位症诊断。UPDB是一个独特的数据库,包含超过1100万人的关联数据,包括全州门诊和住院记录、州生命记录以及犹他大学健康和山间医疗保健电子医疗记录,涵盖了大多数犹他州居民。
参与者/材料、设置、方法:ENDO手术队列由年龄在18 - 44岁之间、既往无子宫内膜异位症诊断且因各种手术指征接受妇科腹腔镜检查或剖腹手术的个体组成。总共有173名女性根据疾病的手术可视化诊断为子宫内膜异位症,35%为浅表性子宫内膜异位症,9%为卵巢子宫内膜异位囊肿,14%为深部浸润性子宫内膜异位症。来自UPDB的当代行政健康数据包括犹他州卫生部住院和门诊手术记录以及犹他大学和山间医疗保健电子健康记录中的ICD诊断代码。
对于子宫内膜异位症诊断,我们发现相对较高的敏感性(0.88)和特异性(0.87)以及高度一致性(卡帕[Κ]=0.74)。我们发现浅表性子宫内膜异位症(n = 143,0.86,0.83,Κ = 0.65)和卵巢子宫内膜异位囊肿(n = 38,0.82,0.92,Κ = 0.58)具有相似的高敏感性、特异性和一致性。然而,深部浸润性子宫内膜异位症(n = 58)的敏感性较低(0.12)和一致性(Κ = 0.17),但特异性较高(0.99)。
局限性、谨慎原因:本研究使用的UPDB数据未包括药物处方数据和非结构化数据,如临床记录。这些额外的数据类型可能有助于子宫内膜异位症的检测。大多数参与者为白人或亚洲人,西班牙裔占11%,这可能会限制对美国某些州的普遍性。此外,鉴于我们使用行政健康记录的参与者也是ENDO研究的一部分,由于他们为ENDO研究填写的手术表格,外科医生在诊断编码方面可能更加警惕,这可能导致有效性增加。然而,UPDB中比较的代码是由医学编码员作为标准临床实践的一部分输入的。
我们观察到行政健康数据与手术确诊的子宫内膜异位症诊断总体上以及浅表性和卵巢子宫内膜异位囊肿亚型之间存在高度一致性。这些发现可能会让使用行政医疗记录评估子宫内膜异位症风险因素和长期健康结局的研究人员感到放心。我们的发现证实了先前的研究,即深部浸润性子宫内膜异位症具有高特异性但低敏感性,这表明深部浸润性子宫内膜异位症在行政医疗数据中没有可靠的注释。这表明基于病历的深部浸润性子宫内膜异位症诊断可能适用于病因学研究,但不适用于监测或检测研究。
研究资金/竞争利益:最初的ENDO研究由美国国立卫生研究院尤妮斯·肯尼迪·施莱佛国家儿童健康与人类发展研究所的内部研究项目资助(合同编号NO1 - DK - 6 - 3428;NO1 - DK - 6 - 3427;10001406 - 02)。我们承认通过美国国立癌症研究所、犹他大学的P30 CA2014赠款以及犹他大学个性化健康项目和临床与转化科学中心对UPDB提供了部分支持。这项研究还得到了NCRR赠款“共享全州健康数据用于遗传研究”(R01 RR021746,G. Mineau,首席研究员)的支持,犹他州卫生与公众服务部、犹他大学也提供了额外支持。此外,这项研究得到了犹他癌症登记处的支持,该登记处由美国国立癌症研究所的SEER项目资助,合同编号HHSN261201800016I,美国疾病控制与预防中心的国家癌症登记项目,合作协议编号NU58DP007131,犹他大学和亨茨曼癌症基金会也提供了额外支持。本出版物中报告的研究还得到了美国国立卫生研究院(资助编号R01HL164715[授予L.V.F. K.C.S.和A.Z.P.]和K01AG058781[授予K.C.S.])、亨茨曼癌症研究所的乳腺癌和妇科癌症中心以及多丽丝·杜克基金会的COVID - 19基金(用于保留由美国心脏协会资助的临床科学家)的支持。A.C.K.得到了美国国立医学图书馆授予K.E.的培训资助编号5T15LM007124的支持。内容仅由作者负责,不一定代表美国国立卫生研究院或其他赞助商的官方观点。作者之间不存在竞争利益。
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