Published September 25, 2015 | Version v1
Journal article Open

Applying Classification Trees to Hospital Administrative Data to Identify Patients with Lower Gastrointestinal Bleeding

  • 1. Northwestern University
  • 2. University of Chicago
  • 3. Loyola University

Description

Background: Lower gastrointestinal bleeding (LGIB) is a common cause of acute hospitalization. Currently, there is no accepted standard for identifying patients with LGIB in hospital administrative data. The objective of this study was to develop and validate a set of classification algorithms that use hospital administrative data to identify LGIB.

Methods: Our sample consists of patients admitted between July 1, 2001 and June 30, 2003 (derivation cohort) and July 1, 2003 and June 30, 2005 (validation cohort) to the general medicine inpatient service of the University of Chicago Hospital, a large urban academic medical center. Confirmed cases of LGIB in both cohorts were determined by reviewing the charts of those patients who had at least 1 of 36 principal or secondary International Classification of Diseases, Ninth revision, Clinical Modification (ICD-9-CM) diagnosis codes associated with LGIB. Classification trees were used on the data of the derivation cohort to develop a set of decision rules for identifying patients with LGIB. These rules were then applied to the validation cohort to assess their performance.

Results: Three classification algorithms were identified and validated: a high specificity rule with 80.1% sensitivity and 95.8% specificity, a rule that balances sensitivity and specificity (87.8% sensitivity, 90.9% specificity), and a high sensitivity rule with 100% sensitivity and 91.0% specificity.

Conclusion: These classification algorithms can be used in future studies to evaluate resource utilization and assess outcomes associated with LGIB without the use of chart review.

Data availability

Because our data are from a single site and contain numerous rare events, it is not possible to de-identify the data used in our study. Due to ethical restrictions related to protecting patient confidentiality imposed by the University of Chicago Institutional Review Board, we are unable to make the data used in the study available to researchers. We can only share summary data that does not include details that could potentially identify a patient. We are willing to provide additional summary data upon request. Interested readers should contact Dr. David Meltzer (dmeltzer@medicine.bsd.uchicago.edu).

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Additional details

Identifiers

DOI
10.1371/journal.pone.0138987
Other
oai:uchicago.tind.io:7684

Funding

National Institutes of Health
K07 CA154862
National Institutes of Health
KM1 CA156717

UChicago Information

Division(s)
Biological Sciences Division
Department(s)
Medicine