Mediterranean Journal of Hematology and Infectious Diseases (Jul 2017)

A POPULATION-BASED STUDY ON MYELODYSPLASTIC SYNDROMES IN THE LAZIO REGION (ITALY), MEDICAL MISCODING AND 11-YEAR MORTALITY FOLLOW-UP: THE GRUPPO ROMANO-LAZIALE MIELODISPLASIE EXPERIENCE OF RETROSPECTIVE MULTICENTRIC REGISTRY

  • Flavia Mayer,
  • Laura Faglioni,
  • Nera Agabiti,
  • Susanna Fenu,
  • Francesco Buccisano,
  • Roberto Latagliata,
  • Roberto Ricci,
  • Maria Antonietta Aloe Spiriti,
  • Caterina Tatarelli,
  • Massimo Breccia,
  • Giuseppe Cimino,
  • Luana Fianchi,
  • Svitlana Gumenyuk,
  • Stefano Mancini,
  • Luca Maurillo,
  • Carolina Nobile,
  • Pasquale Niscola,
  • Anna Lina Piccioni,
  • Agostino Tafuri,
  • Giulio Trapè,
  • Alessandro Andriani,
  • Paolo De Fabritis,
  • Maria Teresa Voso,
  • Marina Davoli,
  • Gina Zini

DOI
https://doi.org/10.4084/mjhid.2017.046
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 9, no. 1
pp. e2017046 – e2017046

Abstract

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Results on myelodysplastic syndromes (MDS) from population-based studies are rare and these data are infrequently collected by cancer registries because diagnostic difficulties and under-reported data. Our is the first regional Lazio study about medical coding, diagnosis, classification and mortality of MDS patients. This study is aimed at evaluating MDS medical miscoding and conducting a mortality follow-up in a cohort of 644 MDS patients enrolled in the Gruppo Romano-Laziale Mielodisplasie (GROM-L) registry from 2002 to 2010. We linked the MDS cohort with 2 regional health information systems: the Hospital Information System (HIS) and the regional Mortality Information System (MIS). About the first objective 92% of the patients had at most 12 hospitalization, but 28.5% of them had no hospitalization with the 238.7 ICD-9-CM. About the second objective we observed 45.5% of death during the follow-up, Myelodysplastic Syndrome was the second cause of death, other frequent causes of death were myeloid leukemia and aplastic anemia. This study highlights for the first time in Lazio that a disease like MDS, involving many resources for care assistance, tends to be under-documented in the HIS archive. This may be due to the evolution of the disease over the time, the inappropriate use of existing ICD-9-CM and the limitations of current ICD-9-CM classification. Moreover, the most frequent causes of death other than MDS might suggest a miscoding of MDS in the death causes too. In conclusion our registry could be a useful investigational tool to make a continued surveillance on medical miscoding and collect epidemiological data.

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