Agreement of Medication Information Derived From EHR Data Compared to Medicare Insurance Claims: An Analysis of Biologic Disease-Modifying Antirheumatic Drugs.

IF 2.4 4区 医学 Q3 PHARMACOLOGY & PHARMACY Pharmacoepidemiology and Drug Safety Pub Date : 2024-10-01 DOI:10.1002/pds.70020
Jing Li, Rahaf Baker, Rachael Stovall, Jeffrey R Curtis, Fenglong Xie, Jinoos Yazdany, Gabriela Schmajuk
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Abstract

Purpose: Few studies have reported the agreement between medication information derived from ambulatory EHR data compared to administrative claims for high-cost specialty drugs. We used data from a national EHR-enabled registry, the Rheumatology Informatics System for Effectiveness (RISE), with linked Medicare claims in a population of patients with rheumatoid arthritis (RA) to investigate variations in agreement for different biologic disease-modifying agents (bDMARDs) between two data sources (RISE EHR data vs. Medicare claims), categorized by drug, route of administration, and patient insurance factors (dual eligibility).

Methods: Patients ≥ 65 years old, with ≥ 2 visits in RISE with RA ICD codes ≥ 30 days apart, and continuous enrollment in Medicare Parts B and D in 2017-2018 were included. We classified patients as bDMARD users or nonusers in Medicare claims or EHR data in 2018, and we calculated sensitivity, specificity, positive predicted value (PPV), and negative predicted value (NPV) of EHR data for identifying bDMARD users, using Medicare as the reference standard. We also calculated these metrics after stratifying by clinic-administered (Part B) versus. pharmacy-dispensed (Part D) bDMARDs and by patient dual-eligibility.

Results: A total of 26 097 patients were included in the study. Using Medicare claims as the reference standard, EHR data had a sensitivity of 75.0%-90.8% for identifying patients with the same medication and route. PPV for Part B bDMARDs was higher compared with Part D bDMARDs (range 94.3%-97.3% vs. 51.0%-69.6%). We observed higher PPVs for Part D bDMARDs among patients who were dual-eligible (range 82.4%-95.1%).

Conclusion: The risk of misclassification of drug exposure based on EHR data sources alone is small for Medicare Part B bDMARDs but could be as high as 50% for Part D bDMARDs, in particular for patients who are not dually eligible for Medicare and Medicaid.

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从电子病历数据中得出的用药信息与医疗保险索赔的一致性:生物性疾病修饰抗风湿药分析。
目的:很少有研究报告了门诊电子病历数据与高成本专科药物的行政报销单之间的用药信息一致性。我们利用全国性电子病历登记系统(RISE)的数据以及类风湿关节炎(RA)患者的医疗保险报销单,研究了两种数据源(RISE 电子病历数据与医疗保险报销单对比)之间不同生物药物(bDMARDs)的一致性差异,并按药物、给药途径和患者保险因素(双重资格)进行了分类:纳入年龄≥ 65 岁、在 RISE 中就诊次数≥ 2 次且 RA ICD 编码间隔≥ 30 天、2017-2018 年连续参加医疗保险 B 部分和 D 部分的患者。我们将 2018 年医保报销或 EHR 数据中的患者分为 bDMARD 使用者和非使用者,并以医保为参考标准,计算了 EHR 数据用于识别 bDMARD 使用者的灵敏度、特异性、阳性预测值 (PPV) 和阴性预测值 (NPV)。我们还根据诊所给药(B 部分)与药房配药(D 部分)以及患者的双重资格对这些指标进行了分层计算:研究共纳入了 26 097 名患者。以医疗保险报销单为参考标准,电子病历数据在识别使用相同药物和途径的患者方面的灵敏度为 75.0%-90.8%。与 D 部分 bDMARDs 相比,B 部分 bDMARDs 的 PPV 更高(范围为 94.3%-97.3% vs. 51.0%-69.6%)。我们观察到,符合双重资格的患者使用 D 部分 bDMARDs 的 PPV 值更高(范围为 82.4%-95.1%):结论:仅根据电子病历数据源对药物暴露进行错误分类的风险对于医保 B 部分的 bDMARDs 来说很小,但对于 D 部分的 bDMARDs 来说可能高达 50%,特别是对于不同时符合医保和医保的患者。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
4.80
自引率
7.70%
发文量
173
审稿时长
3 months
期刊介绍: The aim of Pharmacoepidemiology and Drug Safety is to provide an international forum for the communication and evaluation of data, methods and opinion in the discipline of pharmacoepidemiology. The Journal publishes peer-reviewed reports of original research, invited reviews and a variety of guest editorials and commentaries embracing scientific, medical, statistical, legal and economic aspects of pharmacoepidemiology and post-marketing surveillance of drug safety. Appropriate material in these categories may also be considered for publication as a Brief Report. Particular areas of interest include: design, analysis, results, and interpretation of studies looking at the benefit or safety of specific pharmaceuticals, biologics, or medical devices, including studies in pharmacovigilance, postmarketing surveillance, pharmacoeconomics, patient safety, molecular pharmacoepidemiology, or any other study within the broad field of pharmacoepidemiology; comparative effectiveness research relating to pharmaceuticals, biologics, and medical devices. Comparative effectiveness research is the generation and synthesis of evidence that compares the benefits and harms of alternative methods to prevent, diagnose, treat, and monitor a clinical condition, as these methods are truly used in the real world; methodologic contributions of relevance to pharmacoepidemiology, whether original contributions, reviews of existing methods, or tutorials for how to apply the methods of pharmacoepidemiology; assessments of harm versus benefit in drug therapy; patterns of drug utilization; relationships between pharmacoepidemiology and the formulation and interpretation of regulatory guidelines; evaluations of risk management plans and programmes relating to pharmaceuticals, biologics and medical devices.
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