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Validation and validity of diagnoses in the General Practice Research Database: a systematic review

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TLDR
The range of methods used to validate diagnoses in the General Practice Research Database (GPRD) are investigated, to summarize findings and to assess the quality of these validations.
Abstract
AIMS To investigate the range of methods used to validate diagnoses in the General Practice Research Database (GPRD), to summarize findings and to assess the quality of these validations. METHODS A systematic literature review was performed by searching PubMed and Embase for publications using GPRD data published between 1987 and April 2008. Additional publications were identified from conference proceedings, back issues of relevant journals, bibliographies of retrieved publications and relevant websites. Publications that reported attempts to validate disease diagnoses recorded in the GPRD were included. RESULTS We identified 212 publications, often validating more than one diagnosis. In total, 357 validations investigating 183 different diagnoses met our inclusion criteria. Of these, 303 (85%) utilized data from outside the GPRD to validate diagnoses. The remainder utilized only data recorded in the database. The median proportion of cases with a confirmed diagnosis was 89% (range 24-100%). Details of validation methods and results were often incomplete. CONCLUSIONS A number of methods have been used to assess validity. Overall, estimates of validity were high. However, the quality of reporting of the validations was often inadequate to permit a clear interpretation. Not all methods provided a quantitative estimate of validity and most methods considered only the positive predictive value of a set of diagnostic codes in a highly selected group of cases. We make recommendations for methodology and reporting to strengthen further the use of the GPRD in research.

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References
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Statins and the risk of idiopathic venous thromboembolism: Letter to the editors

TL;DR: Yang and colleagues may have arrived at a spuriously negative conclusion based on a suboptimal study design, and valid evidence is needed to address the hypothesis that statins may be protective against VTE.
Journal ArticleDOI

Incidence of ocular melanoma in the general population and in glaucoma patients

TL;DR: It is shown that the geographical distribution of the practices participating in the GPRD is representative of the UK population, apart from small variations between regions, and comparisons of age and sex distribution with the National Population Census have shown these to be closely similar.
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