4 research outputs found
Developing a cancerâspecific trigger tool to identify treatmentârelated adverse events using administrative data
Abstract Background As there are few validated tools to identify treatmentârelated adverse events across cancer care settings, we sought to develop oncologyâspecific âtriggersâ to flag potential adverse events among cancer patients using claims data. Methods 322Â 887 adult patients undergoing an initial course of cancerâdirected therapy for breast, colorectal, lung, or prostate cancer from 2008 to 2014 were drawn from a large commercial claims database. We defined 16 oncologyâspecific triggers using diagnosis and procedure codes. To distinguish treatmentârelated complications from comorbidities, we required a logical and temporal relationship between a treatment and the associated trigger. We tabulated the prevalence of triggers by cancer type and metastatic status during 1âyear of followâup, and examined cancer trigger risk factors. Results Cancerâspecific trigger events affected 19% of patients over the initial treatment year. The trigger burden varied by disease and metastatic status, from 6% of patients with nonmetastatic prostate cancer to 41% and 50% of those with metastatic colorectal and lung cancers, respectively. The most prevalent triggers were abnormal serum bicarbonate, blood transfusion, nonâcontrast chest CT scan following radiation therapy, and hypoxemia. Among patients with metastatic disease, 10% had one trigger event and 29% had two or more. Triggers were more common among older patients, women, nonâwhites, patients with low family incomes, and those without a college education. Conclusions Oncologyâspecific triggers offer a promising method for identifying potential patient safety events among patients across cancer care settings