Facilitating Clinical Research through the Health Information Exchange: Lipid Control as an Example

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2010-11-13
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American English
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AMIA
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Abstract

Using data from the Indiana Network of Patient Care (INPC), we analyzed long-term statin adherence patterns and their effects on low-density lipoprotein cholesterol (LDL-C) control among patients with type 2 diabetes. Statin adherence was measured by proportion of days covered (PDC) for a 6-month interval prior to each LDL-C test date. Patient demographic and clinical characteristics were used as covariates for LDL-C control and predictors for statin adherence. From 4,350 eligible subjects, 25,596 6-month PDC and LDL-C level pairs were formed between 2001 and 2009. Rates of suboptimal adherence and suboptimal LDL-C control were 68.5% and 46.6%, respectively. Positive predictors for LDL-C control included adherence to statin (OR: 1.87, p<0.0001) and older age (OR: 1.11, p=0.01). Significant risk factors for non-adherence were young age, female gender, African American race and newly-treated status. This study demonstrated the utility of a health information exchange in health outcome and clinical effectiveness research.

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Zhu VJ, Tu W, Rosenman MB, Overhage JM. Facilitating Clinical Research through the Health Information Exchange: Lipid Control as an Example. AMIA Annu Symp Proc. 2010;2010:947-951. Published 2010 Nov 13.
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AMIA Annual Symposium Proceedings
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