| Literature DB >> 27716136 |
Peter Cnudde1,2,3, Ola Rolfson4,5, Szilard Nemes4,5, Johan Kärrholm4,5, Clas Rehnberg6, Cecilia Rogmark4,7, John Timperley4,8, Göran Garellick4,5.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Sweden offers a unique opportunity to researchers to construct comprehensive databases that encompass a wide variety of healthcare related data. Statistics Sweden and the National Board of Health and Welfare collect individual level data for all Swedish residents that ranges from medical diagnoses to socioeconomic information. In addition to the information collected by governmental agencies the medical profession has initiated nationwide Quality Registers that collect data on specific diagnoses and interventions. The Quality Registers analyze activity within healthcare institutions, with the aims of improving clinical care and fostering clinical research. MAIN BODY: The Swedish Hip Arthroplasty Register (SHAR) has been collecting data since 1979. Joint replacement in general and hip replacement in particular is considered a success story with low mortality and complication rate. It is credited to the pioneering work of the SHAR that the revision rate following hip replacement surgery in Sweden is amongst the lowest in the world. This has been accomplished by the diligent follow-up of patients with feedback of outcomes to the providers of the healthcare along with post market surveillance of individual implant performance. During its existence SHAR has experienced a constant organic growth. One major development was the introduction of the Patient Reported Outcome Measures program, giving a voice to the patients in healthcare performance evaluation. The next aim for SHAR is to integrate patients' wishes and expectations with the surgeons' expertise in the form of a Shared Decision-Making (SDM) instrument. The first step in building such an instrument is to assemble the necessary data. This involves linking the SHARs database with the two aforementioned governmental agencies. The linkage is done by the 10-digit personal identity number assigned at birth (or immigration) for every Swedish resident. The anonymized data is stored on encrypted serves and can only be accessed after double identification.Entities:
Keywords: Comorbidities; Database; PROM; Revision; Shared Decision Model; Socio-economic; Total Hip Arthroplasty
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27716136 PMCID: PMC5050595 DOI: 10.1186/s12891-016-1262-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Musculoskelet Disord ISSN: 1471-2474 Impact factor: 2.362
Fig. 1Patient pathway
Fig. 2Data sources and workflow
Overview of the data from the Swedish Hip Arthroplasty Register, Statistics Sweden and the National Board of Health and Welfare
| Swedish Hip Arthroplasty Register | Statistics Sweden | National Board of Health and Welfare | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Variable Category | Variable | Variable Category | Variable | Variable Category | Variable |
|
| Demography | Place of birth |
| ||
| Demography | Year of birth | Residency | Diagnosis | International classification of diagnosis (ICD-9/ICD-10) | |
| Sex | Relocation within Sweden, emigration | Diagnosis related grouping (DRG) | |||
| Weight | Marital status | Main diagnose | |||
| Height | Socioeconomic classification (Care Need Index) | Interventions | Classification of interventions (KVÅ) | ||
| Diagnosis (at hip) | International classification of diagnosis (ICD-10) | Income | Individual disposable income | Date | Admission |
| Laterality | Family disposable income | Discharge | |||
| American Society of Anaesthesiologists (ASA) Physical Status classification | Family circumstances | Family type | Elective or acute care | ||
|
| Children at home | Hospital | Hospital name | ||
| Hospital | Hospital identifier | Number of people in the household | Clinic | ||
| Date | Date of surgery | Education | Educational attainment | Administrative category (rural, central, university, private) | |
| Type of surgery | Primary, revision, reoperation | Year of graduation from highest education | Type of care | Outpatient/inpatient | |
| Total, partial, resurfacing hip replacement | |||||
| Implants characteristics | Manufacturer | Sickness benefits | Days with sickness compensation |
| |
| Model | Total income due to sickness | Cause of death | International classification of diagnosis (ICD-9/ICD-10) | ||
| Size | Days with occupational injury compensation | Date | Date of death | ||
| Type of implant fixation | Total income due to occupational injury |
| |||
| Surgery details | Surgical approach | Days with rehabilitation compensation | Date | Prescription date | |
|
| Total income due to rehabilitation | Withdrawal date | |||
| Date | Date of completion | Unemployment benefits | Unemployment classification | Drug | Name |
| Musculoskeletal comorbidity | Charnley class | Total income from unemployment compensation | Dosage | ||
| Pain | Visual analogue scale (VAS) hip pain | Days unemployed | Anatomic Therapeutic Chemical classification system (ATC) | ||
| Health-related quality of life | EuroQol 5 dimensions | Days partly unemployed | Cost | Patient cost | |
| EuroQol VAS | Welfare benefits | Family welfare benefits | Subsidized cost | ||
| Satisfaction | Satisfaction VAS | Housing benefits |
| ||
| Treatment prior to THR | Physiotherapy | Diagnosis | International classification of diagnosis (ICD-7 up to ICD-10) | ||
| Patient education | Type (malignant, non-malignant) | ||||
| Localisation/laterality | |||||
| Metastasis | |||||
| Morphologic classification | |||||
| Date of diagnosis | |||||
Fig. 3Number of total hip replacements in Sweden from 1999 through 2012 and fixation type
Fig. 4Average distribution of age at time of surgery in patients undergoing total hip replacements in Sweden from 1999 through 2012 with the estimated trend line (blue line) and associated 95 % pointwise confidence band (grey shaded area)
Fig. 5Gender distribution in patients undergoing total hip replacement in Sweden from 1999 through 2012 with the estimated trend line (blue line) and associated 95 % pointwise confidence band (grey shaded area)
Illustrative example of the data provided by the National Board of Health and Welfare regarding the hip replacement patients
| Category | Description |
|---|---|
| Cancer case | Of the 274,930 total hip replacement patients 79,698 patients had 107,464 cancer cases registered between 1958 and 2013 |
| Death | Of the 274,930 total hip replacements 108,771 patients deceased until 2013 |
| Healthcare events | Of the 274,930 total hip replacements 274,086 underwent inpatient care at 2,910,848 occasions and 249,912 patients underwent outpatient care at 5,131,759 occasions. Additionally between 1997 and 2000 50,827 patients received inpatient care operations. After year 2000 inpatient care operations are registered in inpatient or outpatient care registries. This data base contains a total of 13,573,599 entries of ICD-9 or ICD-10 codes. |
| Drug usage | The yearly drug usage averaged around 7 million withdrawals by 175,000 patients. The total number of drug withdrawals was 74,427,986. |