Linked electronic health records for research on a nationwide cohort including over 54 million people in England

Autor: QA Data wrangling, Manuscript drafting, Tim Gentry, Angela Wood, Elizabeth Gaffney, Alvina G. Lai, Garry Coleman, Rouven Priedon, Spiros Denaxas, patient advisory panel, Lynn Laidlaw, Janet Waterhouse, William Whiteley, Jonathan A C Sterne, Michael Molete, Suzannah Power, Venexia M Walker, Amitava Banerjee, Figures, Brian W. Roberts, Debbie Ringham, John P. Walsh, Cathie Sudlow, Samantha Ip, Lynn Morrice, Richard Irvine, Jennifer Cooper, Rachel Denholm, Sam Hollings, data access request provision, revising, Lisa Gray, Estelle Spence, Ashley Akbari, Cath Day
Rok vydání: 2021
Předmět:
Popis: ObjectivesDescribe a new England-wide electronic health record (EHR) resource enabling whole population research on Covid-19 and cardiovascular disease whilst ensuring data security and privacy and maintaining public trust.DesignCohort comprising linked person-level records from national healthcare settings for the English population accessible within NHS Digital’s new Trusted Research Environment.SettingEHRs from primary care, hospital episodes, death registry, Covid-19 laboratory test results and community dispensing data, with further enrichment planned from specialist intensive care, cardiovascular and Covid-19 vaccination data.Participants54.4 million people alive on 1st January 2020 and registered with an NHS general practitioner in England.Main measures of interestConfirmed and suspected Covid-19 diagnoses, exemplar cardiovascular conditions (incident stroke or transient ischaemic attack (TIA) and incident myocardial infarction (MI)) and all-cause mortality between 1st January and 31st October 2020.ResultsThe linked cohort includes over 96% of the English population. By combining person-level data across national healthcare settings, data on age, sex and ethnicity are complete for over 95% of the population. Among 53.2M people with no prior diagnosis of stroke/TIA, 98,721 had an incident stroke/TIA, of which 30% were recorded only in primary care and 4% only in death registry records. Among 53.1M people with no prior history of MI, 62,966 had an incident MI, of which 8% were recorded only in primary care and 12% only in death records. A total of 959,067 people had a confirmed or suspected Covid-19 diagnosis (714,162 in primary care data, 126,349 in hospital admission records, 776,503 in Covid-19 laboratory test data and 48,433 participants in death registry records). While 58% of these were recorded in both primary care and Covid-19 laboratory test data, 15% and 18% respectively were recorded in only one.ConclusionsThis population-wide resource demonstrates the importance of linking person-level data across health settings to maximize completeness of key characteristics and to ascertain cardiovascular events and Covid-19 diagnoses. Although established initially to support research on Covid-19 and cardiovascular disease to benefit clinical care and public health and to inform health care policy, it can broaden further to enable a very wide range of research.
Databáze: OpenAIRE