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Agreement between patient report and medical record review for medications used for rheumatoid arthritis: The accuracy of self-reported medication information in patient registries

✍ Scribed by Solomon, Daniel H. ;Stedman, Margaret ;Licari, Andrea ;Weinblatt, Michael E. ;Maher, Nancy ;shadick, Nancy


Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
2007
Tongue
English
Weight
73 KB
Volume
57
Category
Article
ISSN
0004-3591

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✦ Synopsis


Abstract

Objective

With the growth in patient registries in rheumatic disease research, it is important to validate the collected information. We examined the convergent validity of self‐reported medication use for rheumatoid arthritis (RA).

Methods

In the setting of the Brigham Rheumatoid Arthritis Sequential Study (BRASS), a large registry of patients with RA, we examined the agreement between patients' self‐report of current and past RA medication use and information from medical records. For a sample of patients in BRASS, these 2 sources of information were compared using the kappa statistic as well as the percent agreement.

Results

The 91 patients selected for assessment were typical of a prevalent RA cohort: >80% were women and the mean disease duration was 16 years. The agreement for current medication use was excellent, ranging from 0.71 for sulfasalazine to 0.96 for methotrexate. However, for past medication use agreement was lower, ranging from 0.13 for methotrexate to 0.74 for aurothioglucose. The weighted kappa for cumulative oral glucocorticoid dose was 0.67.

Conclusion

Self‐report of current medication use and cumulative oral glucocorticoid dose appears to have moderate to excellent validity. However, self‐report of past medication use may not be valid.