Cancers (Jun 2023)

Examining Final-Administered Medication as a Measure of Data Quality: A Comparative Analysis of Death Data with the Central Cancer Registry in Republic of Korea

  • Yae Won Tak,
  • Jeong Hyun Han,
  • Yu Jin Park,
  • Do-Hoon Kim,
  • Ji Seon Oh,
  • Yura Lee

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/cancers15133371
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 15, no. 13
p. 3371

Abstract

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Death is a crucial outcome in retrospective cohort studies, serving as a criterion for analyzing mortality in a database. This study aimed to assess the quality of extracted death data and investigate the potential of the final-administered medication as a variable to quantify accuracy for the validation dataset. Electronic health records from both an in-hospital and the Korean Central Cancer Registry were used for this study. The gold standard was established by examining the differences between the dates of in-hospital deaths and cancer-registered deaths. Cosine similarity was employed to quantify the final-administered medication similarities between the gold standard and other cohorts. The gold standard was determined as patients who died in the hospital after 2006 and whose final hospital visit/discharge date and death date differed by 0 or 1 day. For all three criteria—(a) cancer stage, (b) cancer type, and (c) type of final visit—there was a positive correlation between mortality rates and the similarities of the final-administered medication. This study introduces a measure that can provide additional accurate information regarding death and differentiates the reliability of the dataset.

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