Identification in Administrative Databases of Women Dying of Breast Cancer

Author:

Gagnon Bruno1,Mayo Nancy E.1,Laurin Carroll1,Hanley James A.1,McDonald Neil1

Affiliation:

1. From the Divisions of Stroke, Rehabilitation, Health Care Services, Breast Cancer, and Outcomes; Palliative Care, Ethics at the End of Life, and Communication; and Statistical Models, Methodology, and Clinical Epidemiology; and Oncology, Bioethics, Anorexia-Cachexia, and Palliative Care, McGill University, Montréal, Quebéc, Canada.

Abstract

Purpose Palliative care is an essential component of cancer care, and population-based research is needed to monitor its impact. Administrative databases are the cornerstone of health services research. Their limitation is that cause of death is not sufficient to readily classify decedents as terminally ill for the study of the health services they received at the end of life. The study purpose is to develop and test the validity of an algorithm allowing the classification of the decedents as dying of breast cancer (BC), using administrative data. Methods Validation was carried out through a chart review of 119 BC decedents extracted from hospital-based databases. This algorithm was applied to 3,384 deceased women with BC representative of the whole population. The effect of the classification by the algorithm was illustrated by the shift in the distributions of age and place of death. Results The validation showed a sensitivity of 95%, a specificity of 89%, a positive predictive value of 98%, and negative predictive value of 77% for the classification of women dying of BC. Of the 3,384 decedents, 2,293 were classified as dying of, and 1,091 as not dying of BC. Women dying of BC were younger, died less often at home (6.9% v 17.9%), and in chronic care institutions (4.1% v 14.8%), and more often in acute-care beds (69.9% v 57.1%). Conclusion This novel way to classify decedents is conceptually based and empirically validated through chart review and impact on distribution of age and place of death.

Publisher

American Society of Clinical Oncology (ASCO)

Subject

Cancer Research,Oncology

Reference20 articles.

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