4.2 Article

An automated database case definition for serious bleeding related to oral anticoagulant use

期刊

PHARMACOEPIDEMIOLOGY AND DRUG SAFETY
卷 20, 期 6, 页码 560-566

出版社

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/pds.2109

关键词

bleeding complications; anticoagulant; positive predictive value

资金

  1. Vanderbilt Center for Education and Research on Therapeutics (CERTs) [HS-016974]

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Purpose Bleeding complications are a serious adverse effect of medications that prevent abnormal blood clotting. To facilitate epidemiologic investigations of bleeding complications, we developed and validated an automated database case definition for bleeding-related hospitalizations. Methods The case definition utilized information from an in-progress retrospective cohort study of warfarin-related bleeding in Tennessee Medicaid enrollees 30 years of age or older. It identified inpatient stays during the study period of January 1990 to December 2005 with diagnoses and/or procedures that indicated a current episode of bleeding. The definition was validated by medical record review for a sample of 236 hospitalizations. Results We reviewed 186 hospitalizations that had medical records with sufficient information for adjudication. Of these, 165 (89%, 95% CI: 83-92%) were clinically confirmed bleeding-related hospitalizations. An additional 19 hospitalizations (10%, 7-15%) were adjudicated as possibly bleeding-related. Of the 165 clinically confirmed bleeding-related hospitalizations, the automated database and clinical definitions had concordant anatomical sites (gastrointestinal, cerebral, genitourinary, other) for 163 (99%, 96-100%). For those hospitalizations with sufficient information to distinguish between upper/lower gastrointestinal bleeding, the concordance was 89% (76-96%) for upper gastrointestinal sites and 91% (77-97%) for lower gastrointestinal sites. Conclusion A case definition for bleeding-related hospitalizations suitable for automated databases had a positive predictive value of between 89% and 99% and could distinguish specific bleeding sites. Copyright (C) 2011 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.

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