Estimates of mortality rates in people with diabetes and cardiovascular disease using administrative pharmaceutical data

Background Quantifying the mortality risk for people with diabetes is challenging because of associated comorbidities. The recording of cause specific mortality from accompanying cardiovascular disease in death certificate notifications has been considered to underestimate the overall mortality ris...

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Main Authors: Shaun Purkiss, Tessa Keegel, Hassan Vally, Dennis Wollersheim
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Swansea University 2019-11-01
Series:International Journal of Population Data Science
Online Access:https://ijpds.org/article/view/1166
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spelling doaj-ca22a2feb56f4e0f9b7086a9536ab92a2020-11-25T02:14:03ZengSwansea UniversityInternational Journal of Population Data Science2399-49082019-11-014310.23889/ijpds.v4i3.1166Estimates of mortality rates in people with diabetes and cardiovascular disease using administrative pharmaceutical dataShaun Purkiss0Tessa Keegel1Hassan Vally2Dennis Wollersheim3La Trobe University, MelbourneLa Trobe University, MelbourneLa Trobe University, MelbourneLa Trobe University, Melbourne Background Quantifying the mortality risk for people with diabetes is challenging because of associated comorbidities. The recording of cause specific mortality from accompanying cardiovascular disease in death certificate notifications has been considered to underestimate the overall mortality risk in persons with diabetes. Main Aim Develop a technique to quantify mortality risk from pharmaceutical administrative data and apply it to persons diagnosed with diabetes, and associated cardiovascular disease and dyslipidaemia before death. Methods Persons with diabetes, cardiovascular disease and dyslipidaemia were identified in a publicly available Australian Pharmaceutical data set using World Health Organization anatomic therapeutic codes assigned to medications received. Diabetes associated multi-morbidity cohorts were constructed and a proxy mortality (PM) event determined from medication and service discontinuation. Estimates of mortality rates were calculated from 2004 for 10 years and compared persons with diabetes alone and associated cardiovascular disease and dyslipidemia. Results This study identified 346,201 individuals within the 2004 calendar year as having received treatments for diabetes (n=51,422), dyslipidaemia (n=169,323) and cardiovascular disease including hypertension (n=280,105). Follow up was 3.3 x 106 person-years. Overall crude PM was 26.1 per 1000 person-years. PM rates were highest in persons with cardiovascular disease and diabetes in combination (47.5 per 100 person years). Statin treatments significantly improved the mortality rates in all persons with diabetes and cardiovascular disease alone and in combination over age groups >44 years (p<.001). Age specific diabetes PM rates using pharmaceutical data correlated well with Australian data from the National Diabetes Service Scheme (r=0.82) Conclusion Proxy mortality events calculated from medication discontinuation in persons with chronic conditions can provide an alternative method to estimate disease mortality rates. The technique also allows the assessment of mortality risk in persons with chronic disease multi-morbidity. https://ijpds.org/article/view/1166
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Shaun Purkiss
Tessa Keegel
Hassan Vally
Dennis Wollersheim
spellingShingle Shaun Purkiss
Tessa Keegel
Hassan Vally
Dennis Wollersheim
Estimates of mortality rates in people with diabetes and cardiovascular disease using administrative pharmaceutical data
International Journal of Population Data Science
author_facet Shaun Purkiss
Tessa Keegel
Hassan Vally
Dennis Wollersheim
author_sort Shaun Purkiss
title Estimates of mortality rates in people with diabetes and cardiovascular disease using administrative pharmaceutical data
title_short Estimates of mortality rates in people with diabetes and cardiovascular disease using administrative pharmaceutical data
title_full Estimates of mortality rates in people with diabetes and cardiovascular disease using administrative pharmaceutical data
title_fullStr Estimates of mortality rates in people with diabetes and cardiovascular disease using administrative pharmaceutical data
title_full_unstemmed Estimates of mortality rates in people with diabetes and cardiovascular disease using administrative pharmaceutical data
title_sort estimates of mortality rates in people with diabetes and cardiovascular disease using administrative pharmaceutical data
publisher Swansea University
series International Journal of Population Data Science
issn 2399-4908
publishDate 2019-11-01
description Background Quantifying the mortality risk for people with diabetes is challenging because of associated comorbidities. The recording of cause specific mortality from accompanying cardiovascular disease in death certificate notifications has been considered to underestimate the overall mortality risk in persons with diabetes. Main Aim Develop a technique to quantify mortality risk from pharmaceutical administrative data and apply it to persons diagnosed with diabetes, and associated cardiovascular disease and dyslipidaemia before death. Methods Persons with diabetes, cardiovascular disease and dyslipidaemia were identified in a publicly available Australian Pharmaceutical data set using World Health Organization anatomic therapeutic codes assigned to medications received. Diabetes associated multi-morbidity cohorts were constructed and a proxy mortality (PM) event determined from medication and service discontinuation. Estimates of mortality rates were calculated from 2004 for 10 years and compared persons with diabetes alone and associated cardiovascular disease and dyslipidemia. Results This study identified 346,201 individuals within the 2004 calendar year as having received treatments for diabetes (n=51,422), dyslipidaemia (n=169,323) and cardiovascular disease including hypertension (n=280,105). Follow up was 3.3 x 106 person-years. Overall crude PM was 26.1 per 1000 person-years. PM rates were highest in persons with cardiovascular disease and diabetes in combination (47.5 per 100 person years). Statin treatments significantly improved the mortality rates in all persons with diabetes and cardiovascular disease alone and in combination over age groups >44 years (p<.001). Age specific diabetes PM rates using pharmaceutical data correlated well with Australian data from the National Diabetes Service Scheme (r=0.82) Conclusion Proxy mortality events calculated from medication discontinuation in persons with chronic conditions can provide an alternative method to estimate disease mortality rates. The technique also allows the assessment of mortality risk in persons with chronic disease multi-morbidity.
url https://ijpds.org/article/view/1166
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