Validation of forearm fracture diagnoses in administrative patient registers
Permanent link
https://hdl.handle.net/10037/31631Date
2023-08-24Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Author
Omsland, Tone Kristin; Solberg, Lene Bergendal; Bjørnerem, Åshild Marit; Borgen, Tove Tveitan; Andreasen, Camilla; Wisløff, Torbjørn; Hagen, Gunhild; Basso, Trude; Gjertsen, Jan-Erik; Apalset, Ellen Margrete; Figved, Wender; Stutzer, Jens-Meinhard; Nissen, Frida Igland; Hansen, Ann Kristin; Joakimsen, Ragnar Martin; Figari, Elisa; Peel, Geoffrey; Rashid, Ali A.; Khoshkhabari, Jashar; Eriksen, Erik Fink; Nordsletten, Lars; Frihagen, Frede; Dahl, CecilieAbstract
Purpose In Norway, forearm fractures are routinely recorded in the Norwegian Patient Registry (NPR). However, these data have not been validated. Data from patient administrative systems (PAS) at hospitals are sent unabridged to NPR. By using data from PAS, we aimed to examine (1) the validity of the forearm fracture diagnoses and (2) the usefulness of washout periods, follow-up codes, and procedure codes to defne incident forearm fracture cases.
Methods This hospital-based validation study included women and men aged≥19 years referred to fve hospitals for treatment of a forearm fracture during selected periods in 2015. Administrative data for the ICD-10 forearm fracture code S52 (with all subgroups) in PAS and the medical records were reviewed. X-ray and computed tomography (CT) reports from examinations of forearms were reviewed independently and linked to the data from PAS. Sensitivity and positive predictive values (PPVs) were calculated using image reports and/or review of medical records as gold standard.
Results Among the 8482 reviewed image reports and medical records, 624 patients were identifed with an incident forearm fracture during the study period. The sensitivity of PAS registrations was 90.4% (95% CI: 87.8–92.6). The PPV increased from 73.9% (95% CI: 70.6–77.0) in crude data to 90.5% (95% CI: 88.0–92.7) when using a washout period of 6 months. Using procedure codes and follow-up codes in addition to 6-months washout increased the PPV to 94.0%, but the sensitivity fell to 69.0%.
Conclusion A relatively high sensitivity of forearm fracture diagnoses was found in PAS. PPV varied depending on the algorithms used to defne cases. Choice of algorithm should therefore depend on study purposes. The results give useful measures of forearm fracture diagnoses from administrative patient registers. Depending on local coding practices and treatment pathways, we infer that the fndings are relevant to other fracture diagnoses and registers.