Abstract

BackgroundReal-world evidence (RWE) can inform patient management decisions, but RWE studies are associated with limitations. Linkage of different RWE data types could address such limitations by enriching data and improving scientific quality. Using the example of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) in Germany, this study assessed the value of data linkage between primary and secondary data sources for RWE.MethodsPost hoc analysis of data from an observational RWE study, which used prospectively collected data and data from an insurance claims database to assess treatment adherence and persistence in patients with COPD in Germany. Patient-level primary data were collected from the prospective observational study (primary dataset, N = 636), and claims data from the sickness fund AOK Nordost (claims dataset, N = 74,916). Primary and claims data were linked at a patient level using insurance numbers (linked dataset). Patients in the linked dataset were indexed at date of study inclusion for primary data and matched calendar date for claims data. Agreement between primary and claims data was examined for patients in the linked dataset based on comparisons between recorded sociodemographic data at index, comorbidities (primary: any recorded; claims: pre-index), prescriptions for COPD therapies (type and date) and exacerbations in the 12-month post-index period.ResultsThe linked dataset included primary and claims data for 536 patients. Fewer comorbid patients were reported in primary data compared with claims data (p < 0.001), with overall agreement between 63.6% (hypertension) and 90.5% (osteoporosis). Number of prescriptions for COPD therapies per patient was lower in primary versus claims data (3.7 vs 10.3 prescriptions, respectively), with only 24.5% of prescriptions recorded in both datasets. Only 11.5% of exacerbations (moderate or severe) were recorded in both datasets, with 15.5% recorded only in primary data and 73.0% recorded only in claims data.ConclusionOur study highlighted discrepancies between primary and claims data capture for this population of German patients with COPD, with lower reporting of comorbidities, COPD therapy prescriptions and exacerbations in primary versus claims data. Study findings suggest that data linkage of primary and claims data could provide enrichment and be useful in fully describing COPD endpoints.

Highlights

  • Real-world evidence (RWE) can inform patient management decisions, but RWE studies are associated with limitations

  • Adherence and persistence were assessed in two ways: using data purposely collected from physicians and patients at multiple centers, and using insurance claims data from the AOK Nordost database (German sickness fund which insures patients located in the regions of Berlin, Brandenburg and Mecklenburg Western Pomerania)

  • The analysis presented here was conducted in three parts; (1) patient-level primary data were collected from the observational study, (2) patient-level data were obtained from the retrospective cohort analysis, and (3) data from the primary dataset were linked to those from the claims dataset at a patient level

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Summary

Introduction

Real-world evidence (RWE) can inform patient management decisions, but RWE studies are associated with limitations. Analyses of real-world evidence (RWE) are becoming increasingly popular in all therapy areas, including respiratory diseases [1, 2]. This is largely because data regarding the effectiveness and safety of treatments are critical to guide treatment decisions by physicians and decision makers/payors, as they are more generalizable to daily care than data from randomized clinical trials with strict inclusion/exclusion criteria [2, 3]. Secondary data studies use data that have been previously recorded for reasons other than the intended study objectives in a retrospective manner Such data may, for example, be obtained from administrative claims databases, existing patient registries, or electronic medical record databases [7]

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