Addressing Information Biases Within Electronic Health Record Data to Improve the Examination of Epidemiologic Associations With Diabetes Prevalence Among Young Adults: Cross-Sectional Study.

IF 3.1 3区 医学 Q2 MEDICAL INFORMATICS
Sarah Conderino, Rebecca Anthopolos, Sandra S Albrecht, Shannon M Farley, Jasmin Divers, Andrea R Titus, Lorna E Thorpe
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Background: Electronic health records (EHRs) are increasingly used for epidemiologic research to advance public health practice. However, key variables are susceptible to missing data or misclassification within EHRs, including demographic information or disease status, which could affect the estimation of disease prevalence or risk factor associations.

Objective: In this paper, we applied methods from the literature on missing data and causal inference to assess whether we could mitigate information biases when estimating measures of association between potential risk factors and diabetes among a patient population of New York City young adults.

Methods: We estimated the odds ratio (OR) for diabetes by race or ethnicity and asthma status using EHR data from NYU Langone Health. Methods from the missing data and causal inference literature were then applied to assess the ability to control for misclassification of health outcomes in the EHR data. We compared EHR-based associations with associations observed from 2 national health surveys, the Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance System (BRFSS) and the National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey, representing traditional public health surveillance systems.

Results: Observed EHR-based associations between race or ethnicity and diabetes were comparable to health survey-based estimates, but the association between asthma and diabetes was significantly overestimated (OREHR 3.01, 95% CI 2.86-3.18 vs ORBRFSS 1.23, 95% CI 1.09-1.40). Missing data and causal inference methods reduced information biases in these estimates, yielding relative differences from traditional estimates below 50% (ORMissingData 1.79, 95% CI 1.67-1.92 and ORCausal 1.42, 95% CI 1.34-1.51).

Conclusions: Findings suggest that without bias adjustment, EHR analyses may yield biased measures of association, driven in part by subgroup differences in health care use. However, applying missing data or causal inference frameworks can help control for and, importantly, characterize residual information biases in these estimates.

解决电子健康记录数据中的信息偏差,改进对年轻人糖尿病患病率流行病学关联的研究:横断面研究
背景:电子健康记录(EHR)越来越多地用于流行病学研究,以促进公共卫生实践。然而,电子健康记录中的关键变量容易出现数据缺失或分类错误,包括人口统计信息或疾病状态,这可能会影响对疾病流行率或风险因素关联的估计:在本文中,我们应用了文献中有关缺失数据和因果推断的方法,以评估在估算纽约市年轻成人患者群体中潜在风险因素与糖尿病之间的关联时,我们是否能减轻信息偏差:我们利用纽约大学朗贡医疗中心的电子病历数据,按种族或民族以及哮喘状况估算了糖尿病的几率比(OR)。然后应用缺失数据和因果推断文献中的方法来评估控制 EHR 数据中健康结果分类错误的能力。我们将基于电子病历的关联与代表传统公共卫生监测系统的行为风险因素监测系统(BRFSS)和国家健康与营养调查(National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey)这两项国家健康调查中观察到的关联进行了比较:基于电子病历观察到的种族或民族与糖尿病之间的关系与基于健康调查的估计值相当,但哮喘与糖尿病之间的关系被明显高估(OREHR 3.01,95% CI 2.86-3.18 vs ORBRFSS 1.23,95% CI 1.09-1.40)。缺失数据和因果推断方法减少了这些估计值的信息偏差,与传统估计值的相对差异低于 50%(ORMissingData 1.79,95% CI 1.67-1.92 和 ORCausal 1.42,95% CI 1.34-1.51):研究结果表明,如果不进行偏倚调整,电子病历分析可能会产生偏倚的关联测量,部分原因是亚组在医疗保健使用方面存在差异。然而,应用缺失数据或因果推断框架有助于控制这些估计值中的残余信息偏差,重要的是,还有助于描述这些偏差的特征。
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来源期刊
JMIR Medical Informatics
JMIR Medical Informatics Medicine-Health Informatics
CiteScore
7.90
自引率
3.10%
发文量
173
审稿时长
12 weeks
期刊介绍: JMIR Medical Informatics (JMI, ISSN 2291-9694) is a top-rated, tier A journal which focuses on clinical informatics, big data in health and health care, decision support for health professionals, electronic health records, ehealth infrastructures and implementation. It has a focus on applied, translational research, with a broad readership including clinicians, CIOs, engineers, industry and health informatics professionals. Published by JMIR Publications, publisher of the Journal of Medical Internet Research (JMIR), the leading eHealth/mHealth journal (Impact Factor 2016: 5.175), JMIR Med Inform has a slightly different scope (emphasizing more on applications for clinicians and health professionals rather than consumers/citizens, which is the focus of JMIR), publishes even faster, and also allows papers which are more technical or more formative than what would be published in the Journal of Medical Internet Research.
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