Ye M, Vena JE, Johnson JA, Shen-Tu G, Eurich DT. Chronic disease surveillance in Alberta's tomorrow project using administrative health data.
Int J Popul Data Sci 2021;
6:1672. [PMID:
34734125 PMCID:
PMC8530189 DOI:
10.23889/ijpds.v6i1.1672]
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Abstract
Introduction
Alberta’s Tomorrow Project (ATP) is the largest population-based prospective cohort study of cancer and chronic diseases in Alberta, Canada. The ATP cohort data were primarily self-reported by participants on lifestyle behaviors and disease risk factors at the enrollment, which lacks sufficient and accurate data on chronic disease diagnosis for longer-term follow-up.
Objectives
To characterize the occurrence rate and trend of chronic diseases in the ATP cohort by linking with administrative healthcare data.
Methods
A set of validated algorithms using ICD codes were applied to Alberta Health (AH) administrative data (October 2000-March 2018) linked to the ATP cohort to determine the prevalence and incidence of common chronic diseases.
Results
There were 52,770 ATP participants (51.2±9.4 years old at enrollment and 63.7% females) linked to the AH data with average follow-up of 10.1±4.4 years. In the ATP cohort, hypertension (18.5%), depression (18.1%), chronic pain (12.8%), osteoarthritis (10.1%) and cardiovascular diseases (8.7%) were the most prevalent chronic conditions. The incidence rates varied across diseases, with the highest rates for hypertension (22.1 per 1000 person-year), osteoarthritis (16.2 per 1000 person-year) and ischemic heart diseases (13.0 per 1000 person-year). All chronic conditions had increased prevalence over time (p < for trend tests), while incidence rates were relatively stable. The proportion of participants with two or more of these conditions (multi-morbidity) increased from 3.9% in 2001 to 40.3% in 2017.
Conclusions
This study shows an increasing trend of chronic diseases in the ATP cohort, particularly related to cardiovascular diseases and multi-morbidity. Using administrative health data to monitor chronic diseases for large population-based prospective cohort studies is feasible in Alberta, and our approach could be further applied in a broader research area, including health services research, to enhance research capacity of these population-based studies in Canada.
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