| Literature DB >> 24529031 |
Hirut Fassil, Kenneth F Adams, Sheila Weinmann, V Paul Doria-Rose, Eric Johnson, Andrew E Williams, Douglas A Corley, Chyke A Doubeni1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Accurate indication classification is critical for obtaining unbiased estimates of colonoscopy effectiveness and quality improvement efforts, but there is a dearth of published systematic classification approaches. The objective of this study was to evaluate the effects of data-source and adjudication on indication classification and on estimates of the effectiveness of screening colonoscopy on late-stage colorectal cancer diagnosis risk.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2014 PMID: 24529031 PMCID: PMC3927818 DOI: 10.1186/1471-2407-14-95
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Cancer ISSN: 1471-2407 Impact factor: 4.430
Figure 1Decision algorithm for colonoscopy indication classification.
Figure 2Flow diagram of the derivation of indication variables for colonoscopy. *Up to three coded reasons were recorded from each data source during the chart audit. †One indication variable was derived for each data source. ‡This is a single indication assigned to each test combining all coded data collected on each test during chart audit using the computer algorithm shown in Figure 1. It combined data from referral note, progress note and procedure report. §‘N’ is the number of patients. The numbers in parentheses are the tests received by the N patients. ¶A test was selected for review if more than one indication could be assigned or was unknown in all data sources, or relevant free-text data. #Tests on these patients were not selected for review and/or adjudication (see text).
Demographic and clinical characteristics of cases and controls, SEARCH Study 2006–2008, n = 1,039
| Age, year | |
| 55-64 | 252 (24.3) |
| 65-74 | 346 (33.3) |
| 75-85 | 441 (42.4) |
| Female | 515 (49.5) |
| Study site | |
| A | 206 (19.8) |
| B | 386 (37.2) |
| C | 129 (12.4) |
| D | 318 (30.6) |
| Poverty levels, quartiles* | |
| 1 | 253 (24.4) |
| 2 | 251 (24.2) |
| 3 | 253 (24.4) |
| 4 | 248 (23.9) |
| Missing | 34 (3.3) |
| Length of enrollment with health plan before reference date, yr | |
| 5.0-7.4 | 172 (16.6) |
| 7.5-9.9 | 115 (11.1) |
| >10 | 752 (72.4) |
| Number of preventive outpatient health care visits within 5 years of reference date | |
| 0 | 411 (39.6) |
| 1 | 251 (24.2) |
| 2-3 | 243 (23.4) |
| 4+ | 134 (12.9) |
| Family history of colorectal cancer (CRC)† | 96 (9.2) |
| Charlson comorbidity index at baseline‡ | |
| 0 | 842 (81.0) |
| 1 | 148 (14.2) |
| 2+ | 49 (4.7) |
| Had a healthcare visit during the 2-year period at baseline‡ | 161 (15.5) |
| Undergone colonoscopy | 524 (50.4) |
| Had ≥2 colonoscopies | 88 (8.5) |
*Households below 1999 federal poverty levels within the block-group from 2000 decennial census measures. Higher quartiles correspond to higher levels of household poverty in the census block-group.
†This variable refers to family history that did not meet the exclusion – those with a history of colorectal cancer diagnosed in any first degree relative before age 50 or 2 or more relatives of any age, or other familial syndromes.
‡Baseline refers to the 2-year period at the beginning of each patient’s observation period.
Figure 3Percentage distribution of colonoscopy indication by medical records data sources and targeted adjudication, at the test-level and analytic or patient-level. *The numbers are the percentages in each classification group for colonoscopies in Figure 3A or patients in Figure 3B. There were 647 colonoscopies observed in 524 patients. The distribution of indication in Figure 3B, correspond to the analytic variable. Each of the colored sections of the stacked bars represents the classification of the indication as shown in the legend. The “all sources combined” indication is assigned with data from all sources using the classification algorithm.
Figure 4Agreement on colonoscopy indication classification across three medical records data sources: test-level and patient-level analysis. The percentages are the observed agreement and the proportions are the weighted kappa (ĸ) statistic. *The numbers in the circles are the patient-level analyses results.
Association between screening colonoscopy and risk of incident late-stage CRC according to data source, SEARCH Study 2006–2008, n = 1,039
| | | | |
| Progress note | 0.31 (0.14-0.70) | −9.5 | 0.64 |
| Referral note | 0.46 (0.22-0.98) | 28.0 | 0.41 |
| Procedure report | 0.50 (0.25-1.02) | 31.2 | 0.26 |
| All sources combined | 0.30 (0.14-0.65) | −21.6 | 0.52 |
| Adjudicated indication | 0.36 (0.19-0.68) | Ref | Ref |
| | | | |
| Progress note | 0.32 (0.17-0.64) | 2.4 | 0.98 |
| Referral note | 0.45 (0.23-0.85) | 34.9 | 0.12 |
| Procedure report | 0.43 (0.23-0.79) | 27.4 | 0.23 |
| All sources combined | 0.31 (0.16-0.58) | −6.2 | 0.69 |
| Adjudicated indication | 0.33 (0.17-0.62) | Ref | Ref |
Conditional logistic regression modelling was performed with separate indicator variables for colonoscopy and sigmoidoscopy and adjusted for receipt of ‘definite’ screening barium enema and FOBT, census block-group poverty levels (as a continuous variable), number of preventive health care visits, family history of colorectal cancer, and comorbidity index at baseline. Missing values of poverty level were imputed using predictive mean matching.
*Two-sided Wald Chi-square (χ2) P-values of the difference between effect sizes.