Does the use of Medicare claims data accurately ascertain cardiovascular events compared to adjudicated trial data in the Women's Health Initiative?
Cardiovascular events ascertained via Medicare claims provide comparable hazard ratios and confidence intervals to formally adjudicated trial outcomes, supporting their use in pragmatic trials.
BACKGROUND: To reduce research costs in the context of pragmatic trials, consideration is given to using administrative data (Medicare claims) to ascertain clinical outcomes. METHODS: In the historical context of the Women's Health Initiative, the correspondence between selected cardiovascular events derived from Medicare claims was compared to those documented and adjudicated in this large-scale prevention trial. RESULTS: Classification performance varies somewhat by type of outcome, but hazard ratios and confidence intervals derived from the two data sources were quite comparable. CONCLUSION: These encouraging results provided the needed support to launch a new embedded pragmatic trial of physical activity that will rely heavily on Medicare claims to ascertain cardiovascular disease incidence in the majority of those randomized.
Anderson et al. (Thu,) studied this question.
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