4.1 Article

A Distribution-based Method for Assessing The Differences between Clinical Trial Target Populations and Patient Populations in Electronic Health Records

Journal

APPLIED CLINICAL INFORMATICS
Volume 5, Issue 2, Pages 463-479

Publisher

GEORG THIEME VERLAG KG
DOI: 10.4338/ACI-2013-12-RA-0105

Keywords

Clinical trials; selection bias; comparative effectiveness research; electronic health records; clinical research informatics; meta-analysis

Funding

  1. National Library of Medicine [R01LM009886, R01LM010815, R01LM006910]
  2. National Center for Advancing Translational Sciences [UL1TR000040]

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Objective: To improve the transparency of clinical trial generalizability and to illustrate the method using Type 2 diabetes as an example. Methods: Our data included 1,761 diabetes clinical trials and the electronic health records (EHR) of 26,120 patients with Type 2 diabetes who visited Columbia University Medical Center of New York Presbyterian Hospital. The two populations were compared using the Generalizability Index for Study Traits ( GIST) on the earliest diagnosis age and the mean hemoglobin A(1c) (HbA(1c)) values. Results: Greater than 70% of Type 2 diabetes studies allow patients with HbA1c measures between 7 and 10.5, but less than 40% of studies allow HbA(1c)<7 and fewer than 45% of studies allow HbA(1c)>10.5. In the real-world population, only 38% of patients had HbA1c between 7 and 10.5, with 12% having values above the range and 52% having HbA(1c)<7. The GIST for HbA1c was 0.51. Most studies adopted broad age value ranges, with the most common restrictions excluding patients >80 or <18 years. Most of the real-world population fell within this range, but 2% of patients were <18 at time of first diagnosis and 8% were >80. The GIST for age was 0.75. Conclusions: We contribute a scalable method to profile and compare aggregated clinical trial target populations with EHR patient populations. We demonstrate that Type 2 diabetes studies are more generalizable with regard to age than they are with regard to HbA1c. We found that the generalizability of age increased from Phase 1 to Phase 3 while the generalizability of HbA1c decreased during those same phases. This method can generalize to other medical conditions and other continuous or binary variables. We envision the potential use of EHR data for examining the generalizability of clinical trials and for defining population-representative clinical trial eligibility criteria.

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