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Probabilistic Matching of Deidentified Data From a Trauma Registry and a Traumatic Brain Injury Model System Center: A Follow-up Validation Study.

Authors :
Kumar RG
Wang Z
Kesinger MR
Newman M
Huynh TT
Niemeier JP
Sperry JL
Wagner AK
Source :
American journal of physical medicine & rehabilitation [Am J Phys Med Rehabil] 2018 Apr; Vol. 97 (4), pp. 236-241.
Publication Year :
2018

Abstract

In a previous study, individuals from a single Traumatic Brain Injury Model Systems and trauma center were matched using a novel probabilistic matching algorithm. The Traumatic Brain Injury Model Systems is a multicenter prospective cohort study containing more than 14,000 participants with traumatic brain injury, following them from inpatient rehabilitation to the community over the remainder of their lifetime. The National Trauma Databank is the largest aggregation of trauma data in the United States, including more than 6 million records. Linking these two databases offers a broad range of opportunities to explore research questions not otherwise possible. Our objective was to refine and validate the previous protocol at another independent center. An algorithm generation and validation data set were created, and potential matches were blocked by age, sex, and year of injury; total probabilistic weight was calculated based on of 12 common data fields. Validity metrics were calculated using a minimum probabilistic weight of 3. The positive predictive value was 98.2% and 97.4% and sensitivity was 74.1% and 76.3%, in the algorithm generation and validation set, respectively. These metrics were similar to the previous study. Future work will apply the refined probabilistic matching algorithm to the Traumatic Brain Injury Model Systems and the National Trauma Databank to generate a merged data set for clinical traumatic brain injury research use.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1537-7385
Volume :
97
Issue :
4
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
American journal of physical medicine & rehabilitation
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
29557888
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1097/PHM.0000000000000838