1. Validation of algorithms using International Classification of Diseases for the identification of herpes zoster episodes requiring hospitalization in Quebec, Canada
- Author
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Nicolas Gagnon, Esther Trudel, Sandra Proulx, Dominique Marcoux, Micheline Gagné, Alex Carignan, Eve Capistran, Vincent Morin, and Claire Nour Abou Chakra
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Adult ,Databases, Factual ,Rate ratio ,Herpes Zoster ,symbols.namesake ,International Classification of Diseases ,Administrative database ,Humans ,Medicine ,Poisson regression ,Medical diagnosis ,Retrospective Studies ,General Veterinary ,General Immunology and Microbiology ,business.industry ,Incidence (epidemiology) ,Quebec ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,Retrospective cohort study ,Confidence interval ,Hospitalization ,Infectious Diseases ,symbols ,Molecular Medicine ,Complication ,business ,Algorithm ,Algorithms - Abstract
OBJECTIVE: We determined secular changes in the incidence of hospitalizations due to herpes zoster (HZh) and assessed the validity of HZ International Classification of Diseases (ICD) code algorithms for identifying HZh in a region of Quebec, Canada. METHODS: We performed a validation study as part of a retrospective cohort study of adult HZ patients hospitalized at Centre Hospitalier Universitaire de Sherbrooke during 2000-2017. Cases were identified using ICD codes from an inpatient administrative database. HZ cases identified by ICD-9 (053.xx) and ICD-10 (B02.x) codes were chart-confirmed, and performance characteristics of ICD code algorithms were calculated (positive predictive value [PPV] and sensitivity). RESULTS: Overall, 1314 hospitalizations with HZ diagnosis (HZh) with or without complications were identified during 2000-2017. Among the hospitalizations, 526 (44.4%) were due to active HZ disease or a complication related to a recent or previous HZ episode. These hospitalizations were due to active disease at the time of admission (340/526, 64.6%), HZ that developed during hospitalization (120/526, 22.8%), or a complication directly related to a recent or previous HZ episode (66/526, 12.6%). PPV was significantly higher when HZ was the primary diagnosis (276/310, 89%, 95% confidence interval [CI]: 85-92%) than when HZ was a secondary diagnosis (254/928, 27%, 95% CI: 25-30%) (pâ¯
- Published
- 2021
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