Validation of a computer case definition for sudden cardiac death in opioid users

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Abstract

Background: To facilitate the use of automated databases for studies of sudden cardiac death, we previously developed a computerized case definition that had a positive predictive value between 86% and 88%. However, the definition has not been specifically validated for prescription opioid users, for whom out-of-hospital overdose deaths may be difficult to distinguish from sudden cardiac death. Findings. We assembled a cohort of persons 30-74 years of age prescribed propoxyphene or hydrocodone who had no life-threatening non-cardiovascular illness, diagnosed drug abuse, residence in a nursing home in the past year, or hospital stay within the past 30 days. Medical records were sought for a sample of 140 cohort deaths within 30 days of a prescription fill meeting the computer case definition. Of the 140 sampled deaths, 81 were adjudicated; 73 (90%) were sudden cardiac deaths. Two deaths had possible opioid overdose; after removing these two the positive predictive value was 88%. Conclusions: These findings are consistent with our previous validation studies and suggest the computer case definition of sudden cardiac death is a useful tool for pharmacoepidemiologic studies of opioid analgesics. © 2012 Kawai et al.; licensee BioMed Central Ltd.

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APA

Kawai, V. K., Murray, K. T., Michael Stein, C., Cooper, W. O., Graham, D. J., Hall, K., & Ray, W. A. (2012). Validation of a computer case definition for sudden cardiac death in opioid users. BMC Research Notes, 5. https://doi.org/10.1186/1756-0500-5-473

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