The observation period for a (cancer) registry #493
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We have discussed back and forth in the Cancer Registry of Norway (CRN) as well. We started out by choosing alternative 1 for start date (date of incidence), and had end date to be either date of death or emigration or - if the patient was still alive - date of extraction of the OMOP-data from our cancer registry database. After the discussions @peterprinsen-iknl refer to in his post, and after having discussed back and forth in the CRN, we have ended up changing our view. This is based on several things, but one of the most important was the sentence here: http://cdmqueries.omop.org/observation-period (my bolding of text):
So, since this is based on person, not case, we agreed in the CRN that: and, OBSERVATION_PERIOD.observation_period_end_date = The death date/date on which the vital status of the patient was last checked For pasients still alive, "last checked" is equal to the extraction date for the current version of the dataset. This is the time-span where we can observe the cancer-related information for a patient, including for instance also prior screening participations etc. which happens before the incidence date/date of diagnosis. |
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Friends: This is an old discussion, but in a cancer registry it is even more pertinent.
That is the problem. The Observation period is like a surveillance camera. It should give you a reasonable expectation that if something happens it will be in the data. So, the meaning of the absence of a record matters here. In a cancer registry, that would be cancer diagnoses and treatments and the dynamics of the diseases (progression, remission, symptoms, toxicity, death, etc.). But still. If you cannot expect any meaningful data in a period of time it should not be part of the Observation Period. From that perspective, I wouldn't put the start at the birth date or 1989. It should be the date when data are showing up in the registry. If that is diagnosis date - so be it. If studies want a washout period - too bad. Just pre-dating the start date doesn't help you.
Should not be a problem. The standard methods and tools take care of that. |
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@peterprinsen-iknl: That is one of the common limitation we are dealing with when it comes to using cancer registry data for these kind of population-based network studies. On one hand, the granular information in registries make them unique sources of information especially when it comes to tumor characteristics at baseline and survival, and on the other hand, the cross sectional nature of the data and lack of additional information required for phenotype development and analyses limit their utility. Unfortunately, changing the definition have huge impact on the validity and reliability of the cohorts in other datasources. We also cannot change the definitions in one databases because that would be against the our notion of standardized cohorts and analytics across the network. My suggestion is to get together and identify objectives (from the studyathons and other studies) that can be addressed in NCR and only use NCR for those instances. I know there is still a good proportion of the ongoing pioneer studies that can be addressed in NCR. We should also investigate how the data can be augmented through linkage with other data sources. |
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We have been discussing the observation period among several European cancer registries and we have not yet reached a consensus. We therefor thought it may be useful to continue the discussion on this forum to collect other opinions. Below I will discuss the choices for the start date and the end date that we have come up with so far and their pros and cons.
OBSERVATION_PERIOD.observation_period_start_date
1. The incidence date
pros:
cons:
2. The date of birth or the date from which there is full coverage of the region by the registry
pros:
cons:
3. The incidence date minus a fixed time period, for example 1 year
pros:
cons:
OBSERVATION_PERIOD.observation_period_end_date
1. The date of the last entry for the patient in the OMOP-CDM for the particular cancer diagnosis
pros:
cons:
2. The death date/date on which the vital status of the patient was last checked
pros:
cons:
(Current) choice for Netherlands Cancer Registry (NCR)
For the NCR we have chosen option 2 for the start date (date of birth or 1989 (date from which we have national coverage)) and option 2 for the end date (death date/date on which we last checked the vital status of the patient (which we do once a year)).
Our reasoning is:
Potential issues with this choice:
We would like to know:
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