Current practice in reporting exposure in pharmacoepidemiological studies

Publication date

2019-08-01

Authors

Hempenius, MirjamISNI 0000000492511755
Luijken, Kim
De Boer, AnthoniusISNI 0000000389596105
Klungel, Olaf H.ISNI 0000000390199414
Groenwold, Rolf H.H.ISNI 0000000394374611
Gardarsdottir, H.ORCID 0000-0001-5623-9684ISNI 0000000395317045

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Abstract

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Abstract

Background: Exposure definitions vary across pharmacoepidemiological studies. As different definitions can lead to different results, transparent reporting of the exposure definition is of utmost importance. Objectives: This study assessed the current status of reported exposure definitions in pharmacoepidemiological research as baseline measurement compared to the ISPE-ISPOR taskforce reporting guideline published in 2018. Methods: We systematically reviewed all observational pharmacoepidemiological studies that used routinely collected health data. We included studies with > = 250 subjects published in 2017 in six leading (pharmaco-)epidemiological journals. Information was extracted about all items regarding reporting of exposure as presented in the ISPE-ISPOR guideline. Primary outcome was the percentage of studies reporting each ISPE-ISPOR guideline item. Results: 91 studies were included. Almost all studies reported the type of exposure (e.g. current use, cumulative dose) (n = 89, 97.8%), the exposure risk window in general terms (n = 77, 84.6%) and the exposure assessment window (n = 89, 97.8%). The operationalisation of the exposure window was poorly described: only 14 (15.4%) studies explicitly reported the presence or absence of an induction period, 5 (5.5%) respectively 21 (23.1%) studies reported how they handled stockpiling and bridging of exposure episodes, and 28 (30.8%) studies mentioned how long the exposure was extended. How switching between drugs was dealt with and specific drug codes were reported in 52 (57.1%) and 24 (26.4%) publications. Conclusions: Reporting of exposure definitions in current pharmacoepidemiologic studies is suboptimal when compared to the ISPOR-ISPE guideline. Publications of pharmacoepidemiological studies should include more details on exposure ascertainment to allow both replication and quality assessment.

Keywords

adult, conference abstract, female, human, human experiment, male, outcome assessment, practice guideline, quality control, risk assessment, systematic review

Citation

Hempenius, M, Luijken, K, De Boer, A, Klungel, O H, Groenwold, R H H & Gardarsdottir, H 2019, 'Current practice in reporting exposure in pharmacoepidemiological studies', 35th International conference on Pharmacoepidemiology & therapeutic risk management., Philapdelphia, United States, 24/08/19 - 28/08/19 pp. 428. https://doi.org/10.1002/pds.4864, conference