Abstract

BackgroundDental claims data have been used for epidemiological studies without establishing the validity of the recorded diagnoses or procedures. The present study aimed to examine the accuracy of diagnoses, procedures, operation time, and the number of teeth recorded in dental claims data.MethodsWe reviewed the charts of 200 patients who visited and 100 patients who were hospitalized in the Department of General Dentistry, Orthodontics, and Oral and Maxillofacial Surgery in an academic hospital between August 2012 and December 2017. The sensitivity and specificity of the dental claims data for five diseases and 15 procedures were evaluated. We assessed the difference in the number of teeth and duration of general anesthesia between claims data and chart reviews.ResultsSensitivity was more than 86% for six out of seven diagnoses except for pericoronitis (67%). Specificity ranged from 72% (periodontal disease) to 100% (oral cancer for inpatient). The sensitivity of procedures ranged from 10% (scaling for inpatient) to 100%, and the specificity ranged from 6% (food intake on the day of the surgery) to 100%. The mean (standard deviation [SD]) number of teeth in the chart review was 22.6 (6.8), and in the dental claims was 21.6 (8.6). The mean (SD) operation time was 171.2 (120.3) minutes, while the duration of general anesthesia was 270.9 (171.3) minutes.ConclusionsThe present study is the first study to validate dental claims data, and indicates the extent of usefulness of each diagnosis and procedure for future dental research using administrative data.

Highlights

  • In the era of big data, claims data are being increasingly utilized for medical and dental research [1,2,3,4]

  • The numbers of patients whose data were extracted for the calculation of the positive predictive value (PPV) were 12 for death, 51 for surgical site infection, 34 for dysphagia, 14 for medication related osteonecrosis of the jaw (MRONJ), 87 for pneumonia, and 99 for bleeding

  • Sensitivity was more than 86% for six out of seven diagnoses

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Summary

Introduction

In the era of big data, claims data are being increasingly utilized for medical and dental research [1,2,3,4]. To date, no validation study has been conducted for dental claims data despite the widespread application of such databases. The aim of the present study was to examine the accuracy of diagnoses, procedures, operation time, and the. Ono et al BMC Health Services Research (2021) 21:1116 number of teeth recorded in dental claims data in a single academic hospital. We conducted this validation study using chart and radiograph review results as reference standards. Dental claims data have been used for epidemiological studies without establishing the validity of the recorded diagnoses or procedures. The present study aimed to examine the accuracy of diagnoses, procedures, operation time, and the number of teeth recorded in dental claims data

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