Abstract

BackgroundHealth service databases of administrative type can be a useful tool for the study of progression of a disease, but the data reported in such sources could be affected by misclassifications of some patients' real disease states at the time. Aim of this work was to estimate the transition probabilities through the different degenerative phases of liver cirrhosis using health service databases.MethodsWe employed a hidden Markov model to determine the transition probabilities between two states, and of misclassification. The covariates inserted in the model were sex, age, the presence of comorbidities correlated with alcohol abuse, the presence of diagnosis codes indicating hepatitis C virus infection, and the Charlson Index. The analysis was conducted in patients presumed to have suffered the onset of cirrhosis in 2000, observing the disease evolution and, if applicable, death up to the end of the year 2006.ResultsThe incidence of hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) in cirrhotic patients was 1.5% per year. The probability of developing HCC is higher in males (OR = 2.217) and patients over 65 (OR = 1.547); over 65-year-olds have a greater probability of death both while still suffering from cirrhosis (OR = 2.379) and if they have developed HCC (OR = 1.410). A more severe casemix affects the transition from HCC to death (OR = 1.714). The probability of misclassifying subjects with HCC as exclusively affected by liver cirrhosis is 14.08%.ConclusionsThe hidden Markov model allowing for misclassification is well suited to analyses of health service databases, since it is able to capture bias due to the fact that the quality and accuracy of the available information are not always optimal. The probability of evolution of a cirrhotic subject to HCC depends on sex and age class, while hepatitis C virus infection and comorbidities correlated with alcohol abuse do not seem to have an influence.

Highlights

  • Health service databases of administrative type can be a useful tool for the study of progression of a disease, but the data reported in such sources could be affected by misclassifications of some patients’ real disease states at the time

  • Liver cirrhosis can evolve to hepatocellular carcinoma, and the presence of comorbidities, exposure to hepatitis B or C virus, as well as alcohol consumption and age, can influence the terminal event

  • Retrospective studies, based on the use of health service databases of administrative type (HSDBA), can be a valid alternative, despite the limits posed by the fact that the quality and accuracy of the available information are not always optimal

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Summary

Introduction

Health service databases of administrative type can be a useful tool for the study of progression of a disease, but the data reported in such sources could be affected by misclassifications of some patients’ real disease states at the time. Aim of this work was to estimate the transition probabilities through the different degenerative phases of liver cirrhosis using health service databases. The evolution of chronic degenerative disease is characterized by progression through intermediate states to advanced disease and death. For these diseases, survival analysis must take into account the various transitions from one state to the as well as a series of prognostic variables that can have an influence on each event including death. By means of linkage with the death certificates database (DCDB), it is possible to trace the cause of death, if applicable

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