The interoperability between the Spanish version of the International Classification of Diseases and ORPHAcodes: towards better identification of rare diseases

Abstract Background Rare diseases present a wide spectrum of clinical manifestations and severity levels and are often poorly known and underrepresented, making them difficult to classify. Diagnoses are usually coded using the International Classification of Diseases (ICD), with its different versio...

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Main Authors: Juan Rico, Luis Javier Echevarría-González de Garibay, María García-López, Sandra Guardiola-Vilarroig, Luis Alberto Maceda-Roldán, Óscar Zurriaga, Clara Cavero-Carbonell
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2021-03-01
Series:Orphanet Journal of Rare Diseases
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1186/s13023-021-01763-y
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spelling doaj-182ad1398fca4ceb877ea58695f2dddf2021-03-11T11:27:10ZengBMCOrphanet Journal of Rare Diseases1750-11722021-03-0116111310.1186/s13023-021-01763-yThe interoperability between the Spanish version of the International Classification of Diseases and ORPHAcodes: towards better identification of rare diseasesJuan Rico0Luis Javier Echevarría-González de Garibay1María García-López2Sandra Guardiola-Vilarroig3Luis Alberto Maceda-Roldán4Óscar Zurriaga5Clara Cavero-Carbonell6Rare Diseases Research Unit, Foundation for the Promotion of Health and Biomedical Research in the Valencia RegionDirectorate for Healthcare Planning, Organization and Evaluation, Registries and Health Information Unit, Ministry of Health of the Basque GovernmentRare Diseases Registry, Public Health Office, Castilla and León GovernmentRare Diseases Research Unit, Foundation for the Promotion of Health and Biomedical Research in the Valencia RegionMurcia Region Rare Diseases Information System, Murcia Regional Health CouncilRare Diseases Research Unit, Foundation for the Promotion of Health and Biomedical Research in the Valencia RegionRare Diseases Research Unit, Foundation for the Promotion of Health and Biomedical Research in the Valencia RegionAbstract Background Rare diseases present a wide spectrum of clinical manifestations and severity levels and are often poorly known and underrepresented, making them difficult to classify. Diagnoses are usually coded using the International Classification of Diseases (ICD), with its different versions. In Spain, the ICD-10-ES (stem from the ICD-10-CM–Clinical Modification) is used throughout the National Healthcare System since 2016, indistinctively including rare diseases that often lack a specific code. Orphanet aims to provide high-quality resources on rare diseases. The goal was to interrelate the Orphanet classification with the ICD-10-ES in order to engage a tool to track rare diseases diagnosis and characterize the improvement space for the identification of rare diseases patients in the Spanish Healthcare System. Methods 5775 disorder level ORPHAcodes were mapped to ICD-10-ES codes by comparing the descriptors associated in both classifications. ORPHAcodes were then clustered based on their assigned ICD-10-ES chapter and the redundancy of each individual ICD-10-ES code was calculated by counting the ORPHAcodes they mapped to. Three groups were established: Group 1 (1 ORPHAcode per ICD-10-ES), Group 2 (between 2–49 ORPHAcodes per ICD-10-ES) and Group 3 (≥ 50 ORPHAcodes per ICD-10-ES). Results Equivalences to 1700 ICD-10-ES codes were established for 5664 ORPHAcodes. The ORPHAcodes distribution within the ICD-10-ES showed an aggregation in the “Q” (> 40%), “G” (> 14%), and “E” (12%) chapters. The availability of ICD-10-ES codes to map ORPHAcodes reached its lowest at the “G” and “Q” chapters with less than 0.2 ICD-10-ES codes available per ORPHAcode. Global ICD-10-ES codes redundancy analysis revealed that only 1055 of the equivalences pertain to group 1. Group 2 contained 3358 equivalences with 634 ICD-10-ES codes while 1322 equivalences were group 3 (11 ICD-10-ES). Within ICD-10-ES chapters, “G” and “Q” contained over 30% and 45% of their own equivalences in the highest redundancy level (group 3) respectively, but under 10% one to one equivalences each (group 1). Conclusions ICD-10-ES codes have not enough specificity to identify rare diseases. Direct mapping between ICD and ORPHAcodes or the integration of ORPHAcodes at the healthcare system for diagnoses codification would enable better detection and epidemiological analysis of rare diseases.https://doi.org/10.1186/s13023-021-01763-yRare diseasesICD-10-ESORPHAcodeDiagnosesCodificationHealthcare
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Juan Rico
Luis Javier Echevarría-González de Garibay
María García-López
Sandra Guardiola-Vilarroig
Luis Alberto Maceda-Roldán
Óscar Zurriaga
Clara Cavero-Carbonell
spellingShingle Juan Rico
Luis Javier Echevarría-González de Garibay
María García-López
Sandra Guardiola-Vilarroig
Luis Alberto Maceda-Roldán
Óscar Zurriaga
Clara Cavero-Carbonell
The interoperability between the Spanish version of the International Classification of Diseases and ORPHAcodes: towards better identification of rare diseases
Orphanet Journal of Rare Diseases
Rare diseases
ICD-10-ES
ORPHAcode
Diagnoses
Codification
Healthcare
author_facet Juan Rico
Luis Javier Echevarría-González de Garibay
María García-López
Sandra Guardiola-Vilarroig
Luis Alberto Maceda-Roldán
Óscar Zurriaga
Clara Cavero-Carbonell
author_sort Juan Rico
title The interoperability between the Spanish version of the International Classification of Diseases and ORPHAcodes: towards better identification of rare diseases
title_short The interoperability between the Spanish version of the International Classification of Diseases and ORPHAcodes: towards better identification of rare diseases
title_full The interoperability between the Spanish version of the International Classification of Diseases and ORPHAcodes: towards better identification of rare diseases
title_fullStr The interoperability between the Spanish version of the International Classification of Diseases and ORPHAcodes: towards better identification of rare diseases
title_full_unstemmed The interoperability between the Spanish version of the International Classification of Diseases and ORPHAcodes: towards better identification of rare diseases
title_sort interoperability between the spanish version of the international classification of diseases and orphacodes: towards better identification of rare diseases
publisher BMC
series Orphanet Journal of Rare Diseases
issn 1750-1172
publishDate 2021-03-01
description Abstract Background Rare diseases present a wide spectrum of clinical manifestations and severity levels and are often poorly known and underrepresented, making them difficult to classify. Diagnoses are usually coded using the International Classification of Diseases (ICD), with its different versions. In Spain, the ICD-10-ES (stem from the ICD-10-CM–Clinical Modification) is used throughout the National Healthcare System since 2016, indistinctively including rare diseases that often lack a specific code. Orphanet aims to provide high-quality resources on rare diseases. The goal was to interrelate the Orphanet classification with the ICD-10-ES in order to engage a tool to track rare diseases diagnosis and characterize the improvement space for the identification of rare diseases patients in the Spanish Healthcare System. Methods 5775 disorder level ORPHAcodes were mapped to ICD-10-ES codes by comparing the descriptors associated in both classifications. ORPHAcodes were then clustered based on their assigned ICD-10-ES chapter and the redundancy of each individual ICD-10-ES code was calculated by counting the ORPHAcodes they mapped to. Three groups were established: Group 1 (1 ORPHAcode per ICD-10-ES), Group 2 (between 2–49 ORPHAcodes per ICD-10-ES) and Group 3 (≥ 50 ORPHAcodes per ICD-10-ES). Results Equivalences to 1700 ICD-10-ES codes were established for 5664 ORPHAcodes. The ORPHAcodes distribution within the ICD-10-ES showed an aggregation in the “Q” (> 40%), “G” (> 14%), and “E” (12%) chapters. The availability of ICD-10-ES codes to map ORPHAcodes reached its lowest at the “G” and “Q” chapters with less than 0.2 ICD-10-ES codes available per ORPHAcode. Global ICD-10-ES codes redundancy analysis revealed that only 1055 of the equivalences pertain to group 1. Group 2 contained 3358 equivalences with 634 ICD-10-ES codes while 1322 equivalences were group 3 (11 ICD-10-ES). Within ICD-10-ES chapters, “G” and “Q” contained over 30% and 45% of their own equivalences in the highest redundancy level (group 3) respectively, but under 10% one to one equivalences each (group 1). Conclusions ICD-10-ES codes have not enough specificity to identify rare diseases. Direct mapping between ICD and ORPHAcodes or the integration of ORPHAcodes at the healthcare system for diagnoses codification would enable better detection and epidemiological analysis of rare diseases.
topic Rare diseases
ICD-10-ES
ORPHAcode
Diagnoses
Codification
Healthcare
url https://doi.org/10.1186/s13023-021-01763-y
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