학술논문

The impact of lookback windows on the prevalence and incidence of chronic diseases among people living with HIV: an exploration in administrative health data in Canada.
Document Type
Journal Article
Source
BMC Medical Research Methodology. 1/6/2022, Vol. 22 Issue 1, p1-11. 11p.
Subject
*HIV-positive persons
*DISEASE incidence
*CHRONIC diseases
*DISEASE prevalence
*HIV infection epidemiology
*RESEARCH
*RESEARCH methodology
*RETROSPECTIVE studies
*EVALUATION research
*COMPARATIVE studies
*RESEARCH funding
*LONGITUDINAL method
Language
ISSN
1471-2288
Abstract
Background: We described the impact of different lengths of lookback window (LW), a retrospective time period to observe diagnoses in administrative data, on the prevalence and incidence of eight chronic diseases.Methods: Our study populations included people living with HIV (N = 5151) and 1:5 age-sex-matched HIV-negative individuals (N = 25,755) in British Columbia, Canada, with complete follow-up between 1996 and 2012. We measured period prevalence and incidence of diseases in 2012 using LWs ranging from 1 to 16 years. Cases were deemed prevalent if identified in 2012 or within a defined LW, and incident if newly identified in 2012 with no previous cases detected within a defined LW. Chronic disease cases were ascertained using published case-finding algorithms applied to population-based provincial administrative health datasets.Results: Overall, using cases identified by the full 16-year LW as the reference, LWs ≥8 years and ≥ 4 years reduced the proportion of misclassified prevalent and incidence cases of most diseases to < 20%, respectively. The impact of LWs varied across diseases and populations.Conclusions: This study underscored the importance of carefully choosing LWs and demonstrated data-driven approaches that may inform these choices. To improve comparability of prevalence and incidence estimates across different settings, we recommend transparent reporting of the rationale and limitations of chosen LWs. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]