Colorectal cancer screening in the Iowa Research Network (IRENE): a validity assessment of patient self-report of up-to-date status
Patient self-report of colorectal cancer (CRC) screening remains a critical source of information in determining adherence to recommended guidelines. Accurate assessment is important for clinical decision-making, quality assurance and research. Population subgroup differences can affect self-report...
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ndltd-uiowa.edu-oai-ir.uiowa.edu-etd-55652019-10-13T04:53:19Z Colorectal cancer screening in the Iowa Research Network (IRENE): a validity assessment of patient self-report of up-to-date status Moss, Carol Ann Patient self-report of colorectal cancer (CRC) screening remains a critical source of information in determining adherence to recommended guidelines. Accurate assessment is important for clinical decision-making, quality assurance and research. Population subgroup differences can affect self-report accuracy. Studies relying on patient self-report benefit from assessing validity and attempting to quantify measurement error and bias. This study assessed self-reported CRC screening data accuracy - estimating overall and test-specific adherence using four common validity measures (sensitivity, specificity, concordance, and report-to-records ratio [R2R]) - and evaluated associations between predictor variables and accuracy that might explain variation in estimates. 1,399 patients aged 51-80 years from 16 family medicine offices in the Iowa Research Network (IRENE), a practice-based research network (PBRN), completed an investigator-developed questionnaire and had medical records (MRs) available. Comparison of self-report of up-to-date screening with test documentation in the MR was used to estimate validity; multivariable analysis assessed predictors of concordance, or agreement between self-report and test documentation in the MR, for colonoscopy (CSPY). Predictor variables included patient characteristics (age, gender, education, income, insurance status, family history of CRC and IRENE office), healthcare utilization practices (recency of last visit to office and duration of patient status in office) and patient rural-urban residence classified according to a four-category Rural-Urban Commuting Area (RUCA) coding scheme. Sixty percent of patients reported they were up-to-date with CRC screening by any test, while 48% had screening documented in the MR (sensitivity 0.95, specificity 0.73, concordance 0.83 and R2R 1.24). Nearly all documentation was for CSPY (sensitivity 0.94, specificity 0.76, concordance 0.84 and R2R 1.21). Education, insurance source, CRC family history and patient duration in office, when adjusted for all other variables in the final model, were significant (p < 0.05) predictors of concordance. Age modified a significant association with concordance for patient rural-urban residence (p = 0.03) and for recency of last visit (p = 0.04). Self-reported CRC screening validity was generally acceptable, but overreporting was prevalent across all tests. MR documentation of CRC screening was almost exclusively based on CSPY. Concordance between self-reported CSPY and the MR was good but varied with patient characteristics, healthcare utilization practices and rural-urban residence. 2014-12-01T08:00:00Z thesis application/pdf https://ir.uiowa.edu/etd/1489 https://ir.uiowa.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=5565&context=etd Copyright 2014 Carol Moss Theses and Dissertations eng University of IowaLynch, Charles F. Levy, Barcey T. publicabstract Clinical Epidemiology |
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publicabstract Clinical Epidemiology Moss, Carol Ann Colorectal cancer screening in the Iowa Research Network (IRENE): a validity assessment of patient self-report of up-to-date status |
description |
Patient self-report of colorectal cancer (CRC) screening remains a critical source of information in determining adherence to recommended guidelines. Accurate assessment is important for clinical decision-making, quality assurance and research. Population subgroup differences can affect self-report accuracy. Studies relying on patient self-report benefit from assessing validity and attempting to quantify measurement error and bias. This study assessed self-reported CRC screening data accuracy - estimating overall and test-specific adherence using four common validity measures (sensitivity, specificity, concordance, and report-to-records ratio [R2R]) - and evaluated associations between predictor variables and accuracy that might explain variation in estimates.
1,399 patients aged 51-80 years from 16 family medicine offices in the Iowa Research Network (IRENE), a practice-based research network (PBRN), completed an investigator-developed questionnaire and had medical records (MRs) available. Comparison of self-report of up-to-date screening with test documentation in the MR was used to estimate validity; multivariable analysis assessed predictors of concordance, or agreement between self-report and test documentation in the MR, for colonoscopy (CSPY). Predictor variables included patient characteristics (age, gender, education, income, insurance status, family
history of CRC and IRENE office), healthcare utilization practices (recency of last visit to office and duration of patient status in office) and patient rural-urban residence classified according to a four-category Rural-Urban Commuting Area (RUCA) coding scheme.
Sixty percent of patients reported they were up-to-date with CRC screening by any test, while 48% had screening documented in the MR (sensitivity 0.95, specificity 0.73, concordance 0.83 and R2R 1.24). Nearly all documentation was for CSPY (sensitivity 0.94, specificity 0.76, concordance 0.84 and R2R 1.21). Education, insurance source, CRC family history and patient duration in office, when adjusted for all other variables in the final model, were significant (p < 0.05) predictors of concordance. Age modified a significant association with concordance for patient rural-urban residence (p = 0.03) and for recency of last visit (p = 0.04).
Self-reported CRC screening validity was generally acceptable, but overreporting was prevalent across all tests. MR documentation of CRC screening was almost exclusively based on CSPY. Concordance between self-reported CSPY and the MR was good but varied with patient characteristics, healthcare utilization practices and rural-urban residence. |
author2 |
Lynch, Charles F. |
author_facet |
Lynch, Charles F. Moss, Carol Ann |
author |
Moss, Carol Ann |
author_sort |
Moss, Carol Ann |
title |
Colorectal cancer screening in the Iowa Research Network (IRENE): a validity assessment of patient self-report of up-to-date status |
title_short |
Colorectal cancer screening in the Iowa Research Network (IRENE): a validity assessment of patient self-report of up-to-date status |
title_full |
Colorectal cancer screening in the Iowa Research Network (IRENE): a validity assessment of patient self-report of up-to-date status |
title_fullStr |
Colorectal cancer screening in the Iowa Research Network (IRENE): a validity assessment of patient self-report of up-to-date status |
title_full_unstemmed |
Colorectal cancer screening in the Iowa Research Network (IRENE): a validity assessment of patient self-report of up-to-date status |
title_sort |
colorectal cancer screening in the iowa research network (irene): a validity assessment of patient self-report of up-to-date status |
publisher |
University of Iowa |
publishDate |
2014 |
url |
https://ir.uiowa.edu/etd/1489 https://ir.uiowa.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=5565&context=etd |
work_keys_str_mv |
AT mosscarolann colorectalcancerscreeningintheiowaresearchnetworkireneavalidityassessmentofpatientselfreportofuptodatestatus |
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