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Transforming the Information System for Research in Primary Care (SIDIAP) in Catalonia to the OMOP Common Data Model and Its Use for COVID-19 Research.

Authors :
Raventós, Berta
Fernández-Bertolín, Sergio
Aragón, María
Voss, Erica A
Blacketer, Clair
Méndez-Boo, Leonardo
Recalde, Martina
Roel, Elena
Pistillo, Andrea
Reyes, Carlen
van Sandijk, Sebastiaan
Halvorsen, Lars
Rijnbeek, Peter R
Burn, Edward
Duarte-Salles, Talita
Source :
Clinical Epidemiology; Sep2023, Vol. 15, p969-986, 18p
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

Purpose: The primary aim of this work was to convert the Information System for Research in Primary Care (SIDIAP) from Catalonia, Spain, to the Observational Medical Outcomes Partnership (OMOP) Common Data Model (CDM). Our second aim was to provide a descriptive analysis of COVID-19-related outcomes among the general population.Patients and Methods: We mapped patient-level data from SIDIAP to the OMOP CDM and we performed more than 3,400 data quality checks to assess its readiness for research. We established a general population cohort as of the 1st March 2020 and identified outpatient COVID-19 diagnoses or tested positive for, hospitalised with, admitted to intensive care units (ICU) with, died with, or vaccinated against COVID-19 up to 30th June 2022.Results: After verifying the high quality of the transformed dataset, we included 5,870,274 individuals in the general population cohort. Of those, 604,472 had either an outpatient COVID-19 diagnosis or positive test result, 58,991 had a hospitalisation, 5,642 had an ICU admission, and 11,233 died with COVID-19. A total of 4,584,515 received a COVID-19 vaccine. People who were hospitalised or died were more commonly older, male, and with more comorbidities. Those admitted to ICU with COVID-19 were generally younger and more often male than those hospitalised and those who died.Conclusion: We successfully transformed SIDIAP to the OMOP CDM. From this dataset, a general population cohort of 5.9 million individuals was identified and their COVID-19-related outcomes over time were described. The transformed SIDIAP database is a valuable resource that can enable distributed network research in COVID-19 and beyond. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
11791349
Volume :
15
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
Clinical Epidemiology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
173759564
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.2147/CLEP.S419481