Quantification of information gained by linking claims data to an electronic health record cohort of patients with metastatic breast cancer

Methods

Using ConcertAI Patient360 EHR linked to multiple closed insurance claims sources, we compared an EHR cohort of patients with incident metastatic breast cancer (mBC) to an EHR-claims subcohort (requiring ≥ 90 days claims coverage). We analyzed diagnosis coverage, patient time during lookback and follow-up, baseline characteristics, and rates of 14 adverse events (AEs). Analyses were age stratified due to insurance coverage changes at age 65.

Results

For the EHR cohort (N = 6289), 1438 (23%) were in the EHR-claims subcohort. A greater proportion were aged ≥ 65 years in the EHR cohort (30%) than in the EHR-claims subcohort (17%). EHR-claims patients had longer observation periods and more unique diagnoses across both age groups. For most AEs, incidences were higher in both age groups in the EHR-claims subcohort than in the EHR cohort.

Conclusions

EHR-claims provided more diagnoses and observation time, at the cost of a reduction in sample size and underrepresentation of patients ≥ 65 years. Differing age proportions support age-stratified or standardized analyses for EHR-claims data. Results aid interpretation of differences between EHR and EHR-claims results due to shifts in age, completeness of diagnosis history, and duration of observation.