Literature DB >> 19148879

Early adverse drug event signal detection within population-based health networks using sequential methods: key methodologic considerations.

Jeffrey S Brown1, Martin Kulldorff, Kenneth R Petronis, Robert Reynolds, K Arnold Chan, Robert L Davis, David Graham, Susan E Andrade, Marsha A Raebel, Lisa Herrinton, Douglas Roblin, Denise Boudreau, David Smith, Jerry H Gurwitz, Margaret J Gunter, Richard Platt.   

Abstract

PURPOSE: Active surveillance of population-based health networks may improve the timeliness of detection of adverse events (AEs). Our objective was to expand our previous signal detection work by investigating the effect on signal detection of alternative study specifications.
METHODS: We compared the signal detection performance under various study specifications using historical data from nine health plans involved in the HMO Research Network's Center for Education and Research on Therapeutics (CERT). Five drug-event pairs representing generally accepted associations with an AE and two pairs representing "negative controls" were analyzed. Alternative study specifications related to the definition of incident users and incident AEs were assessed and compared to our previous findings.
RESULTS: Relaxing the incident AE exclusion criteria by (1) including members with prior outpatient diagnoses of interest and (2) halving (to 90 days) the time window specified to define incident exposure and diagnoses increased the number of members under surveillance and as a consequence increased the number of exposed days and diagnoses by about 10-20%. The alternative specifications tend to result in earlier signal detection by 10-16 months, a likely consequence of more exposures and events entering the analysis.
CONCLUSIONS: This paper provides additional preliminary information related to conducting prospective safety monitoring using health plan data and sequential analytic methods. Our findings support continued investigation of using health plan data and sequential analytic methods as a potentially important contribution to active drug safety surveillance. (c) 2009 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.

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Year:  2009        PMID: 19148879     DOI: 10.1002/pds.1706

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Pharmacoepidemiol Drug Saf        ISSN: 1053-8569            Impact factor:   2.890


  7 in total

1.  Early steps in the development of a claims-based targeted healthcare safety monitoring system and application to three empirical examples.

Authors:  Peter M Wahl; Joshua J Gagne; Thomas E Wasser; Debra F Eisenberg; J Keith Rodgers; Gregory W Daniel; Marcus Wilson; Sebastian Schneeweiss; Jeremy A Rassen; Amanda R Patrick; Jerry Avorn; Rhonda L Bohn
Journal:  Drug Saf       Date:  2012-05-01       Impact factor: 5.606

2.  A pharmacoepidemiological network model for drug safety surveillance: statins and rhabdomyolysis.

Authors:  Ben Y Reis; Karen L Olson; Lu Tian; Rhonda L Bohn; John S Brownstein; Peter J Park; Mark J Cziraky; Marcus D Wilson; Kenneth D Mandl
Journal:  Drug Saf       Date:  2012-05-01       Impact factor: 5.606

3.  Development and evaluation of a common data model enabling active drug safety surveillance using disparate healthcare databases.

Authors:  Stephanie J Reisinger; Patrick B Ryan; Donald J O'Hara; Gregory E Powell; Jeffery L Painter; Edward N Pattishall; Jonathan A Morris
Journal:  J Am Med Inform Assoc       Date:  2010 Nov-Dec       Impact factor: 4.497

4.  Near real-time adverse drug reaction surveillance within population-based health networks: methodology considerations for data accrual.

Authors:  Taliser R Avery; Martin Kulldorff; Yury Vilk; Lingling Li; T Craig Cheetham; Sascha Dublin; Robert L Davis; Liyan Liu; Lisa Herrinton; Jeffrey S Brown
Journal:  Pharmacoepidemiol Drug Saf       Date:  2013-02-12       Impact factor: 2.890

5.  Signal detection and monitoring based on longitudinal healthcare data.

Authors:  Marc Suling; Iris Pigeot
Journal:  Pharmaceutics       Date:  2012-12-13       Impact factor: 6.321

6.  A Synthesis of Current Surveillance Planning Methods for the Sequential Monitoring of Drug and Vaccine Adverse Effects Using Electronic Health Care Data.

Authors:  Jennifer C Nelson; Robert Wellman; Onchee Yu; Andrea J Cook; Judith C Maro; Rita Ouellet-Hellstrom; Denise Boudreau; James S Floyd; Susan R Heckbert; Simone Pinheiro; Marsha Reichman; Azadeh Shoaibi
Journal:  EGEMS (Wash DC)       Date:  2016-09-06

7.  Clinical Relation Extraction Toward Drug Safety Surveillance Using Electronic Health Record Narratives: Classical Learning Versus Deep Learning.

Authors:  Tsendsuren Munkhdalai; Feifan Liu; Hong Yu
Journal:  JMIR Public Health Surveill       Date:  2018-04-25
  7 in total

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