Literature DB >> 7811528

Comparison of autopsy, clinical and death certificate diagnosis with particular reference to lung cancer. A review of the published data.

P N Lee1.   

Abstract

Some clinicians and some epidemiologists appear to be under the illusion that techniques available for the diagnosis of internal diseases such as lung cancer have improved so much that autopsies are not necessary on the bodies of most people who die. Partly for this reason, partly for economic reasons and partly because clinicians fear litigation if autopsy shows that they treated patients for the wrong disease, autopsy rates have been falling in most developed countries. The object of the present review was to ascertain how much reliance can reasonably be put on clinical diagnoses made and death certificates completed in the absence of autopsy data. In the case of lung cancer, high rates of false positive and false negative diagnoses are universally prevalent, with biases influencing these rates, so that smokers are more likely to be appropriately investigated for lung cancer, and false negatives are commoner in non-smokers. All investigators who have compared clinical-based and autopsy-based death certificates have concluded that higher autopsy rates are necessary and the results of one study suggest that a high autopsy rate in a hospital leads to improvements in the accuracy of clinical diagnoses. The extent to which diagnoses on death certificates that are dependent solely on clinical data are seriously inaccurate for internal diseases such as lung cancer should engender caution in all who use mortality data to guide public health policies and to identify and quantify environmental risks to healths.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Year:  1994        PMID: 7811528

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  APMIS Suppl        ISSN: 0903-465X


  8 in total

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Authors:  Davood Khalili; Alireza Mosavi-Jarrahi; Fatemeh Eskandari; Yasaman Mousavi-Jarrahi; Farzad Hadaegh; Mohammadali Mohagheghi; Fereidoun Azizi
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5.  Classification of death causes after transplantation (CLASS): Evaluation of methodology and initial results.

Authors:  Neval Ete Wareham; Caspar Da Cunha-Bang; Álvaro H Borges; Christina Ekenberg; Jan Gerstoft; Finn Gustafsson; Ditte Hansen; Carsten Heilmann; Marie Helleberg; Jens Hillingsø; Paul Suno Krohn; Isabelle Paula Lodding; Thomas Kromann Lund; Louise Lundgren; Amanda Mocroft; Michael Perch; Søren Lykke Petersen; Irma Petruskevicius; Allan Rasmussen; Kasper Rossing; Andreas A Rostved; Henrik Sengeløv; Vibeke Rømming Sørensen; Søren Schwartz Sørensen; Jens D Lundgren
Journal:  Medicine (Baltimore)       Date:  2018-07       Impact factor: 1.889

Review 6.  Indirectly estimated absolute lung cancer mortality rates by smoking status and histological type based on a systematic review.

Authors:  Peter N Lee; Barbara A Forey
Journal:  BMC Cancer       Date:  2013-04-09       Impact factor: 4.430

7.  Accuracy of cause of death data routinely recorded in a population-based cancer registry: impact on cause-specific survival and validation using the Geneva Cancer Registry.

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8.  Causes of death certification of adults: an exploratory cross-sectional study at a university hospital in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia.

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  8 in total

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