Integrating healthcare utilization databases for cancer ascertainment in a prospective cohort in a limited resource setting: the Mexican Teachers' Cohort.
Liliana Gómez-Flores-Ramos, Marion Brochier, Dalia Stern, Antonio García-Anaya, Adrian Cortés-Valencia, Jocelyn Jaen, Hugo R Sánchez-Blas, Susana Lozano-Esparza, Andrés Catzin-Kuhlmann, Juan Eugenio Hernández-Ávila, Angélica Pon, Olga Rivera-Ontiveros, Pabel Miranda-Aguirre, Patricia Pérez-Escobedo, Alberto Castellanos, Mildred Chávez-Cárdenas, Oscar Arrieta, Alejandro Mohar, Ruy López-Ridaura, Isabelle Romieu, Mauricio Hernández-Avila, Martín Lajous
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Purpose: Prospective cohort development in low-resource settings may be limited by cancer registry population coverage; however, information routinely collected in health systems may offer opportunities to advance cancer research. We aim to illustrate in a cohort study in Mexico, a cancer ascertainment strategy that integrates multiple sources of information including healthcare utilization databases.
Methods: The Mexican Teachers' Cohort (MTC) includes 114,545 female teachers aged 25 years and older who completed a baseline questionnaire between 2006 and 2010 and were breast cancer free. We used healthcare utilization databases (including electronic health records), self-reported breast cancer, mortality, and cancer registries to identify women with incident breast cancer. We estimated the positive predictive value for self-reported breast cancer and age-specific and age-standardized incidence rates for breast cancer and corresponding 95% confidence intervals (95%CI) calculating person-time from the date of baseline questionnaire response to diagnosis, death, or December 31, 2019.
Results: Between baseline and 2019, we identified 1,313 women with incident breast cancer. We established the diagnosis in 88% using healthcare utilization databases, 6% using cancer and mortality registries, and 6% directly by contacting participants. The positive predictive value of self-reported diagnosed and treated breast cancer was 94% (95%CI 91, 97). The age-standardized incidence was 77.0 per 100,000 person-years (95%CI 75.9, 84.3). The highest incidence was observed in women aged 65-69 years (185.3 per 100,000 person-years).
Conclusion: Leveraging healthcare utilization databases to establish cancer diagnoses within prospective cohorts may offer an opportunity to advance global cancer research.
期刊介绍:
Cancer Causes & Control is an international refereed journal that both reports and stimulates new avenues of investigation into the causes, control, and subsequent prevention of cancer. By drawing together related information published currently in a diverse range of biological and medical journals, it has a multidisciplinary and multinational approach.
The scope of the journal includes: variation in cancer distribution within and between populations; factors associated with cancer risk; preventive and therapeutic interventions on a population scale; economic, demographic, and health-policy implications of cancer; and related methodological issues.
The emphasis is on speed of publication. The journal will normally publish within 30 to 60 days of acceptance of manuscripts.
Cancer Causes & Control publishes Original Articles, Reviews, Commentaries, Opinions, Short Communications and Letters to the Editor which will have direct relevance to researchers and practitioners working in epidemiology, medical statistics, cancer biology, health education, medical economics and related fields. The journal also contains significant information for government agencies concerned with cancer research, control and policy.