Validity of the diagnosis of diabetic microvascular complications in Korean national health insurance claim data

Author:

Kim Hyung JunORCID,Park Moo-SeokORCID,Kim Jee-EunORCID,Song Tae-JinORCID

Abstract

Background: There is inadequate information on the validation of diabetic microvascular complications in the Korean National Health Insurance Service data set. We aimed to validate the diagnostic algorithms regarding the nephropathy, neuropathy, and retinopathy of diabetes.Methods: From various secondary and tertiary medical centers, we selected 6,493 patients aged ≥ 40 years who were diagnosed with diabetic microvascular complications more than once based on codes in the 10th version of the International Classification of Diseases (ICD-10). During 2019 and 2020, we randomly selected the diagnoses of 200 patients, 100 from each of two hospitals. The positive predictive value (PPV), negative predictive value, error rate, sensitivity, and specificity were determined for each diabetic microvascular complication according to the ICD-10 codes, laboratory findings, diagnostic studies, and treatment procedure codes.Results: Among the 200 patients who visited the hospital more than once and had the diagnostic codes of diabetic microvascular complications, 142, 110, and 154 patients were confirmed to have the gold standard of diabetic nephropathy (PPV, 71.0%), diabetic neuropathy (PPV, 55.0%), and diabetic retinopathy (PPV, 77.0%), respectively. The PPV and specificity of diabetic nephropathy (PPV, 71.0–81.4%; specificity, 10.3–53.4%), diabetic neuropathy (PPV, 55.0–81.3%; specificity, 66.7–76.7%) and diabetic retinopathy (PPV, 77.0–96.6%; specificity, 2.2–89.1%) increased after combining them with the laboratory findings, diagnostic studies, and treatment procedures codes. These change trends were observed similarly for both hospitals.Conclusions: Defining diabetic microvascular complications using ICD-10 codes and their related examination codes may be a feasible method for studying diabetic complications.

Funder

National Research Foundation of Korea

Ministry of Education

Ewha Womans University

Publisher

The Korean Society of Clinical Neurophysiology (KAMJE)

Subject

Materials Chemistry

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