International Classification of Diseases (ICD) Codes Fail to Accurately Identify Injection Drug Use Associated Endocarditis Cases

Objectives: Infective endocarditis (IE) secondary to injection drug use (IDU-IE) is a disease with high morbidity, cost, and rapid demographic evolution. Studies frequently utilize combinations of International Statistical Classification of Diseases (ICD) codes to identify IDU-IE cases in electronic medical records. This is a validation of this identification strategy in a US cohort. Methods: Records from January 1, 2004 to September 31, 2015 for those aged ≥18yo with any ICD-coded IE encounter (inpatient or outpatient) were retrieved from the electronic medical record and then manually reviewed and classified as IDU-IE by strict and inclusive criteria. This registry was then used to assess the diagnostic accuracy of 10 identification algorithms that combined substance use, hepatitis C, and IE ICD codes. Results: IE was present in 629 of the 2055 manually reviewed records; 109 reported IDU within 3 months of IE diagnosis and an additional 32 during their lifetime (141 cases). In contrast, no algorithm identified more than 46 (33%) of these cases. Algorithms assessing encounters with both an IE and substance use code had specificities>99% but sensitivities ≤11% with negative predictive values of 83% to 84% and positive predictive values ranging from 75% to 91%. Use of a hepatitis C OR substance use code with an IE-coded encounter resulted in higher sensitivities of 22% to 32% but more false positives and overall positive predictive value of
Source: Journal of Addiction Medicine - Category: Addiction Tags: Original Research Source Type: research