Abstract
Electronic health records stored in primary care databases might be a valuable source to study the epidemiology of atopic disorders and their impact on health-care systems and costs. However, the prevalence of atopic disorders in such databases varies considerably and needs to be addressed. For this study, all children aged 0–18 years listed in a representative primary care database in the period 2002–2014, with sufficient data quality, were selected. The effects of four different strategies on the prevalences of atopic disorders were examined: (1) the first strategy examined the diagnosis as recorded in the electronic health records, whereas the (2) second used additional requirements (i.e., the patient had at least two relevant consultations and at least two relevant prescriptions). Strategies (3) and (4) assumed the atopic disorders to be chronic based on strategy 1 and 2, respectively. When interested in cases with a higher probability of a clinically relevant disorder, strategy 2 yields a realistic estimation of the prevalence of atopic disorders derived from primary care data. Using this strategy, of the 478,076 included children, 28,946 (6.1%) had eczema, 29,182 (6.1%) had asthma, and 28,064 (5.9%) had allergic rhinitis; only 1251 (0.3%) children had all three atopic disorders. Prevalence rates are highly dependent on the clinical atopic definitions used. The strategy using cases with a higher probability of clinically relevant cases, yields realistic prevalences to establish the impact of atopic disorders on health-care systems. However, studies are needed to solve the problem of identifying atopic disorders that are missed or misclassified.
Highlights
The rising prevalence of atopic disorders in children are an important global health problem.[1, 2] Atopy is a predisposition toward developing allergic hypersensitivity
All non-institutionalized residents in the Netherlands are registered in a general practice, even if they do not visit the general practitioners (GPs)
This study investigates the risk of misclassification, which could either result in overestimation or underestimation of atopic disorders
Summary
The rising prevalence of atopic disorders in children are an important global health problem.[1, 2] Atopy is a (genetic) predisposition toward developing allergic hypersensitivity. The clinical manifestation of atopy is allergy. The word ‘‘atopic’’ refers to this genetically mediated predisposition, resulting in the clinical diagnosis by a general practitioners (GPs) of eczema, asthma, and allergic rhinitis. Primary care professionals, e.g., family doctors/ GPs, diagnose and treat these atopic children. In the Netherlands, GPs, are in the frontline of the health-care system, are freely accessible, and use uniform coding systems for recording diagnosis and prescriptions. The electronic health records (EHR) stored in primary care databases contain valid information about the epidemiological denominator, making it a potentially important source of epidemiological data
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