Volume 46 | Number 3 | June 2011

Abstract List

Yuko Kawasumi, Michal Abrahamowicz, Pierre Ernst, Robyn Tamblyn


Objective

To develop and validate the accuracy of a predictive model to identify adult asthmatics from administrative health care databases.


Study Setting

An existing electronic medical record project in Montreal, Quebec.


Study Design

One thousand four hundred and thirty‐one patients with confirmed asthma status were identified from primary care physician's electronic medical record.


Data Collection/Extraction Methods

Therapeutic indication of asthma in an electronic prescription and/or confirmed asthma from an automated problem list were used as the gold standard. Five groups of asthma‐specific markers were identified from administrative health care databases to estimate the probability of the presence of asthma. Cross‐validation evaluated the diagnostic ability of each predictive model using 50 percent of sample.


Principal Findings

The best performance in discriminating between the patients with asthma and those without it included indicators from medical service and prescription claims databases. The best‐fitting algorithm had a sensitivity of 70 percent, a specificity of 94 percent, and positive predictive value of 65 percent. The prescriptions claims–specific algorithm demonstrated a nearly equal performance to the model with medical services and prescription claims combined.


Conclusions

Our algorithm using asthma‐specific markers from administrative claims databases provided moderate sensitivity and high specificity.