0216/2019 - Subnotificação de óbitos por AIDS no Brasil: Linkage dos registros hospitalares com dados de declaração de óbito.
Underreporting of AIDS deaths in Brazil: Linkage of hospital records with death certificate data.
Autor:
• Rondinelle Alves do Carmo - Carmo, R.A - <rondiron@hotmail.com>ORCID: https://orcid.org/ 0000-0002-5328-8170
Coautor(es):
• Gabriela Moreira Policena - Policena, G.M - <gabrielapolicena@gmail.com>ORCID: https://orcid.org/0000-0002-3191-1435
• Gizelton Pereira Alencar - Alencar, G.P - <gizelton@usp.br>
ORCID: https://orcid.org/0000-0002-2354-9050
• Elisabeth Barboza França - França, E. B. - <efranca.med@gmail.com.>
ORCID: https://orcid.org/0000-0001-6984-0233
• Ana Luiza Bierrenbach - Bierrenbach, A.L - <albierrenbach@yahoo.com.br>
ORCID: https://orcid.org/ 0000-0002-6837-0636
Resumo:
Este estudo investigou a subnotificação de óbitos por Síndrome da Imunodeficiência Adquirida (AIDS) no Brasil, utilizando o produto do pareamento entre o Sistema de Informação sobre Mortalidade (SIM) e o Sistema de Informação Hospitalar (SIH) para os anos de 2008 a 2012. A hipótese era de que houvesse óbitos registrados no SIM que deveriam ter a AIDS como causa básica da morte, mas que tinham causas mal classificadas. Muitos desses falecidos tiveram internações anteriores devido à doença. Os óbitos por AIDS subnotificados foram definidos levando-se em consideração as regras de codificação da Classificação Internacional de Doenças 10ª Revisão, com vistas a discriminar os óbitos por AIDS daqueles devido a outras causas em pessoas vivendo com HIV/AIDS. Nesse período, 60.362 falecidos tiveram a AIDS como causa básica, e encontramos outros 2.671 (4,2%) como causas subnotificadas. Os óbitos subnotificados aumentaram a taxa média de mortalidade por AIDS no período de 6,3/100.000 para 6,6/100.000. Em conclusão, este estudo demonstrou que, através do pareamento entre o SIH e o SIM, é possível encontrar subnotificação de óbitos por AIDS no Brasil. Esses resultados servem de alerta para a necessidade de ações que promovam uma melhor certificação das causas de óbitos entre os pacientes com AIDS.Palavras-chave:
AIDS, Subnotificação, Óbito, Sistema de Informação.Abstract:
This study investigated the underreporting of deaths due to Acquired Immunodeficiency Syndrome (AIDS) in Brazil, using the product of the linkage between the Mortality Information System (SIM) and the Hospital Information System (SIH) for the years 2008 to 2012. The hypothesis was that there were deaths recorded in the SIM that should have AIDS as the underlying cause of death, but had poorly classified causes. Many of the decedents had previous hospitalizations due to the illness. Underreported AIDS deaths were defined taking into account the coding rules of the International Classification of Diseases 10th Revision, in order to discriminate AIDS deathsthose due to other causes in people living with HIV / AIDS. In this period, 60,362 deceased had AIDS as the basic cause, and we found another 2,671 (4.2%) as underreported causes. Underreported deaths increased the average AIDS mortality rate6.3/100,000 to 6.6/100,000. In conclusion, this study demonstrated that, through linkage in between SIH and SIM, it is possible to find underreporting of AIDS deaths in Brazil. These results serve as a warning for the need for actions that would promote a better certification of the causes of death among AIDS patients.Keywords:
AIDS, Underreporting, Death, Information System.Conteúdo:
Acessar Revista no ScieloOutros idiomas:
Underreporting of AIDS deaths in Brazil: Linkage of hospital records with death certificate data.
Resumo (abstract):
This study investigated the underreporting of deaths due to Acquired Immunodeficiency Syndrome (AIDS) in Brazil, using the product of the linkage between the Mortality Information System (SIM) and the Hospital Information System (SIH) for the years 2008 to 2012. The hypothesis was that there were deaths recorded in the SIM that should have AIDS as the underlying cause of death, but had poorly classified causes. Many of the decedents had previous hospitalizations due to the illness. Underreported AIDS deaths were defined taking into account the coding rules of the International Classification of Diseases 10th Revision, in order to discriminate AIDS deathsthose due to other causes in people living with HIV / AIDS. In this period, 60,362 deceased had AIDS as the basic cause, and we found another 2,671 (4.2%) as underreported causes. Underreported deaths increased the average AIDS mortality rate6.3/100,000 to 6.6/100,000. In conclusion, this study demonstrated that, through linkage in between SIH and SIM, it is possible to find underreporting of AIDS deaths in Brazil. These results serve as a warning for the need for actions that would promote a better certification of the causes of death among AIDS patients.Palavras-chave (keywords):
AIDS, Underreporting, Death, Information System.Ler versão inglês (english version)
Conteúdo (article):
Underreporting of AIDS deaths in Brazil: linkage of hospital records with death certificate dataRondinelle Alves do Carmo1 - Carmo, R.A -
ORCID: https://orcid.org/ 0000-0002-5328-8170
Gabriela Moreira Policena2 – Policena, G.M -
ORCID: https://orcid.org/0000-0002-3191-1435
Gizelton Pereira Alencar3 – Alencar, G.P - < gizelton@gmail.com>
ORCID: https://orcid.org/0000-0002-2354-9050
Elisabeth Barboza França4 – França, E.B -
ORCID: https://orcid.org/ 0000-0001-6984-0233
Ana Luiza Bierrenbach1,2* - Bierrenbach, A.L -
1. Instituto de Ensino e Pesquisa, Hospital Sírio-Libanês (IEP/HSL)
2. Instituto de Patologia Tropical e Saúde Pública, Universidade Federal de Goiás (UFG)
3. Departamento de Epidemiologia, Escola de Saúde Pública, Universidade de São Paulo (USP)
4. Escola de Medicina, Universidade Federal de Minas Gerais (UFMG)
ABSTRACT
This study investigated the underreporting of deaths due to Acquired Immunodeficiency Syndrome (AIDS) in Brazil, using the product of the linkage between the Mortality Information System (SIM) and the Hospital Information System (SIH) for the years 2008 to 2012. The hypothesis was that there were deaths recorded in the SIM that should have AIDS as the underlying cause of death, but that had been poorly classified. Many of the decedents had previous hospitalizations due to the illness. Underreported AIDS deaths were defined taking into account the coding rules of the International Classification of Diseases 10th Revision, in order to discriminate AIDS deaths from those due to other causes in people living with HIV / AIDS. In this period, 60,362 deceased had AIDS as the underlying cause, and we found another 2,671 (4.2%) as underreported causes. Underreported deaths increased the average AIDS mortality rate from 6.3/100,000 to 6.6/100,000. In conclusion, this study demonstrated that, through linkage in between SIH and SIM, it is possible to find underreporting of AIDS deaths in Brazil. These results serve as a warning for the need for actions that would promote a better certification of the causes of death among AIDS patients.
Keywords: AIDS, Underreporting, Death, Information System.
INTRODUCTION
Brazil has historically made enormous investments in the diagnosis, monitoring and treatment of patients living with AIDS, being a reference for many countries1-3. The government\'s goal is to rapidly reduce new HIV infections, control the disease and reduce AIDS-related deaths so as to meet the international goals. From the beginning of the epidemic in 1980 to 2016, 316,088 deaths were recorded in the Mortality Information System (SIM) with AIDS as the underlying cause, with an annual average of 12,189 deaths in a ten-year period from 2006 to 20164. Unreliable or incomplete data can lead to errors in planning the distribution of public resources, or actions that may be ineffective in controlling, reducing, or eliminating the diseases5. Thus, it is necessary to obtain reliable epidemiological information to allow for the good planning of the public health actions.
Brazilian studies using national secondary data such as the Hospitalization Information System (SIH) and the Mortality Information Systems (SIM) have been expanding in the field of collective health, being used to strengthen epidemiological surveillance and to evaluate hospital morbidity and mortality in SUS6,7. In this context, it is valid to try to complete, correct or simply verify the records of a health information database with data from another base, both of which are routinely collected8,9. Some studies have shown that there is underreporting of AIDS disease and that the inventory of cases carried out with the application of the record linkage method between the notification (SINAN), mortality (SIM), laboratory (SISCEL) and drug logistics (SISCLOM) information systems contributes to decrease this underreporting10-12. But not many studies have been dedicated to the possibility of identifying underreporting of AIDS deaths in Brazil and elsewhere13-16.
Linkage is the pairing of data from multiple registers or database that allows for the qualification of the information contained in each one, filling in of missing data and finding cases and deaths that should be contained in one specific registry, but that are only available in another, in order to discover underreporting and obtain more reliable answers regarding the morbidity and mortality situation17.
Death certificates (DC) in Brazil use the international form recommended by the World Health Organization. The underlying cause of death is the illness or injury that initiated the succession of events that led to death. Among the multiple causes of death stated on the DC, the underlying cause of death (UCD) is identified based on the International Classification of Diseases 10th Revision (ICD-10) coding rules18,19. The underlying cause listed by the physician in DC is usually chosen to be the underlying cause that is recorded in the SIM, although in some cases coding rules need to be applied. Registering HIV / AIDS deaths as UCD is a challenge for public health authorities around the world. Underreporting may compromise public actions needed to address the problem and the implementation of individual or collective health care services.
In this study, we intend to investigate this underreporting of deaths through record linkage between the SIM and the SIH national databases. We hypothesise that there were deaths recorded in the SIM that should have AIDS as the UCD, but instead were poorly classified, even if the patient had previous hospitalizations due to such illness. The present study could only be carried out because of the existence of a consolidated database, product of the linkage between SIM and SIH for the years 2008 and 2012. This database was created in the context of the study "Global Burden of Disease in Brazil - GDB Brasil", for which the results of the present study contributed20.
MATERIAL AND METHODS
Data sources and linkage procedures
This is a descriptive population-based study. The consolidated SIM-SIH database for the years 2008-2012 was the product of a two-step record-linkage process. First, an in-house linkage algorithm was developed in which the probability that two records belong to the same patient was based on the name and date of birth. Municipality of residence was used as a blocking variable. For each record a Bloom Filter was constructed following the methods developed by Schnell et al21. Then, in order to increase the specificity of the matches found using the first step, a deterministic linkage was performed using an algorithm similar to the ones validated by Pacheco et al. and Oliveira et al22,23. This algorithm was developed using a set of rules based on the combination of several key variables (name, date of birth, address, zip code, hospital code, telephone, etc.) and their fragments, including those obtained with Soundex transformations. After the linkage procedures, data on personal identification were deleted. The SIM data comprised all causes of death listed in the death certificates, the date of death and the municipality of residence. The SIH data contain records of all hospitalizations funded by the Unified Health System (SUS), which represents about 2/3 of the total hospitalizations in the country24. Since the SIH database is primarily used for financial reimbursement purposes, the probability of hospitalizations being underreported is small25. The main variable used in the analysis was the one containing the ICD-10 codes for the primary diagnosis, i.e. the condition that caused the hospitalization. Other variables that were used were admission and discharge dates.
The SIM was devised in 1975 due to the recognition of the importance of mortality data for epidemiological knowledge. The system is currently considered as universal, that is, every death that occurs in the country must be registered in it. The system has been continually improved to try to increase the consistency and quality of the information. Coverage has also improved over the past two decades26.
Coding rules for identifying AIDS deaths
ICD-10 codes B20-B24 were the ones used for AIDS identification in both databases. We do not intend to fully explain the coding rules used to select the UCD due to their complexity. In short, the rules use a logic that always seeks to choose the cause that initiated the process of events that led to death. This can easily be done by applying the "General Principle" when the certifying physician declares the causes following what is recommended in the standard form, that is, starting with the “immediate cause” and following back by the logic sequence of “intermediate causes” up to the “UCD” listed on the lowest used line on part 1 of the DC. When the physician does not state the causes correctly, or when he/she lists causes without a logical sequence, the trained coders select one of the listed causes to be the underlying one using the several ICD-10 rules and an electronic algorithm, the SCB program. Unlisted causes cannot be selected18,19.
Table 1 presents a series of causes that are considered predictive or presumptive of AIDS according to the coding rules manual in use in Brazil during the years of the study27,28. These rules, as explained below, were the basis to find underreported AIDS deaths. If one of these causes is wrongly listed on the last line of part 1 of the DCs but there is an AIDS code mentioned in any other line, by rule AIDS will be selected as the UCD.
Table 1. ICD-10 codes for predictive and presumptive causes of AIDS.
Case definitions
SIM records were separated according to their linkage status with the SIH:
• “Unpaired deaths” were those for which no corresponding record of the same individual was found in the SIH.
• “Paired deaths” were those for which one or more records corresponding to the same individual were found in the SIH.
• “Paired deaths linked with a difference of up to one day between hospital discharge and death” were paired deaths according to the definition above, but had the peculiarity that the date of departure from the SIH and the date of death were equal or had one day of difference. This definition, which is a subset of the previous definition, intends to point out that the death occurred during the hospitalization whose cause was AIDS, according to the SIH.
SIM records were also separated according to the reported UCD:
• “All-cause deaths” were those with any code listed in the UCD, including AIDS.
• “Reported AIDS deaths” were those with UCD = AIDS (B20 to B24, O97,8).
Aids deaths were separated into the following categories according to their reporting status:
• “Reported AIDS deaths” were those with UCD = AIDS (B20 to B24, O97,8).
• “Underreported AIDS deaths” are those who should have AIDS in the underlying cause, but who were underreported.
Four types of underreporting of AIDS deaths were defined.
• Type A deaths were those that had an AIDS predictive cause registered as the UCD and a record of current or previous hospitalization due to AIDS in the SIH Death with an AIDS predictive disease listed as the UCD and a hospitalization for HIV / AIDS.
• Type B deaths were those that had an AIDS presumptive cause registered as the UCD and a record of current or previous hospitalization due to AIDS in the SIH Death with an AIDS presumptive disease listed as the UCD and a hospitalization for HIV / AIDS.
• Type C deaths had an ill-defined cause listed as the UCD, that is, with a code from Chapter XVIII - symptoms, signs, and abnormal findings from clinical and laboratory exams not elsewhere classified, and a record of current or previous hospitalization due to AIDS in the SIH Death with an ill-defined UCD and a hospitalization for HIV / AIDS.
• Type D deaths were those for whom the registered UCD does not fall in the previous definitions, i.e. it is not predictive or presumptive of AIDS or an ill-defined cause. In addition, the registered UCDs were also not external, that is, did not have an ICD-10 code from Chapter XX - External causes of morbidity and mortality. Differently from the previous types, these deaths needed to have a record of current hospitalization due to AIDS in the SIH, i.e. with a discharge date on the same date of death, therefore indicating that the death occurred during the current hospitalization Death with current hospitalization due to AIDS, but not type A, B or C.
Examples of each type can be seen in table 2.
Table 2. Examples of each type of underreporting of AIDS deaths.
Analysis
All analyzes were performed using Stata-13 (Stata Corporation, College Station, USA). Using the consolidated SIM-SIH database, algorithms were developed to identify each of the case definitions enumerated above. The percentage of underreporting, which is the main result, was calculated by year and by region of residence, considering the following equation:
Percentage of underreporting = total number of underreported AIDS deaths * 100
total number AIDS deaths
The annual rates of AIDS mortality (per 100,000 inhabitants) were calculated for the country as a whole, before and after the inclusion of the underreported deaths.
1. Before the inclusion of underreported deaths;
Mortality rate = total AIDS deaths reported in the year * 100,000
population in the year
2. After inclusion of underreported deaths.
Mortality rate = total AIDS deaths (report.+ underreport.) in the year * 100,000
population in the year
The present study was included as an amendment to the national project called GLOBAL BURDEN OF DISEASES BRAZIL - GBD Brazil, approved by the Research Ethics Committee of the Federal University of Minas Gerais (CAAE 62803316.7.0000.5149).
RESULTS
In Flowchart 1, between 2008 and 2012, there were a total of 5,829,167 deaths due to all causes recorded in the SIM. Of this total, 60,362 (1%) were due to AIDS, that is, they had AIDS as the UCD. Of the total deaths due to all causes, 2,561,818 (44%) linked with one or more SIH records and, of these, 1,108,743 (43.3%) linked with a SIH record with a difference of up to one day between the dates of death and hospital discharge, so that they refer to the hospitalization in which the death occurred. The proportion of linked records was much higher for AIDS deaths than for those due to all causes. Of the total number of deaths due to AIDS, 43,049 (71.3%) linked with a SIH record, of which 21,893 (50.1%) linked with an SIH record with a difference of up to one day between the dates of death and of hospital discharge.
Table 3 shows the number and percentage of AIDS deaths reported and underreported per year and region. During the whole period, 2,671 AIDS deaths were underreported, what represents an underreporting percentage of 4.2%, which had a certain annual variation, but with no apparent trend. The first year was the one that had the lowest proportion of underreporting. Considering the distribution of reported and underreported AIDS deaths by region, it can be noted that the percentage of underreporting was similar for the regions, from 4.2 to 4.5%, except for the Center-West region where it was lower (2.5%).
Table 4 presents, per year, the total underreporting of each type, according to the study definitions. Although there is some variation in the proportional contribution of each type over the years, in general type D (death with a current hospitalization due to AIDS, but not type A, B or C) had the highest proportion, followed of type A (death with an AIDS predictive disease listed as the UCD and a hospitalization for HIV / AIDS), C (death with an ill-defined UCD, and a hospitalization for HIV / AIDS)
and B (death with an AIDS presumptive disease listed as the UCD, and a hospitalization for HIV / AIDS). A and C had a rising trend and a D had a decreasing one. In the last year of the series, type A had a similar proportion to type D.
AIDS annual mortality rates for the country as a whole before the inclusion of the underreported deaths varied from a minimum of 6.2 in 2008 to a maximum of 6.4 in 2010, with an average of 6.3 for the period (per 100,000 inhabitants). After the inclusion of the underreported deaths, the rates varied from a minimum of 6.5 in 2008 and 2012 to a maximum of 6.7 in 2010, with an average of 6.6 for the period (per 100,000 inhabitants).
DISCUSSION
Using records linked in between the mortality and the hospitalization databases, we found 2,671 AIDS deaths that were underreported during the period from 2008 to 2012, which corresponds to a percentage of 4.2% of the total of AIDS deaths in the period. When the data were detailed by Brazilian regions, the highest underreporting of deaths was recorded in the Southeast region, with 4.5% and the lowest in the Center-West region, with 2.5%. These differences by region can be explained by regional differences in care capacity for people with HIV observed in large urban centers of the country, generally higher in the municipalities of more developed regions. In contrast, municipalities in less developed regions have a growing burden of morbidity and mortality and a relatively low capacity to diagnose and assist HIV patients. The disease is often unknown to the patient and / or health professionals, due to lack of diagnosis or due to the strong social stigma29. In the Center-West, most cases are concentrated in the cities of Brasilia and Goiânia, with good public health care networks and good surveillance services. Among the four types of underreporting considered in the study methodology, those that had the highest proportions were type D (47.5%), followed by type A (37.7%). The increasing trends of types A and C and decreasing type D need to be interpreted with caution, due to the constraints of the analyzed period, that is, the linkage was only done within the study period and, therefore, did not include the adjacent years. For types A, B, and C, the more years a patient had of hospitalizations analysed prior to death, the more likely it would be to find previous AIDS hospitalizations, which is not true for type D. In any case, increased underreporting of types A and C, in the presence of AIDS predictive or ill-defined conditions, serve as a warning for certifying physicians to consider the possibility of AIDS as the underlying cause, indicating that they should actively seek information on the presence of this disease in the patient\'s history and medical records.
In Brazil, there are no studies with a similar methodology at the moment, but there are some studies using different methodologies that aim to quantify the underreporting of AIDS deaths. Fazito et al., using a redistribution method based on SIM data and adjusting for the overall level of completeness, found 25% of underreporting for the period from 2000 to 200616. Pacheco et al., linking SIM data with two AIDS patients’ cohort registries from Rio de Janeiro state for the same period, found 23% of underreporting14. Ciríaco, linking SIM data with the databases of SINAN, SICLOM and SISCEL in Maceió, the state capital of Alagoas, followed by an investigation of the linked records, found 9.8% of underreporting out of 204 total AIDS deaths of individuals from 20 to 49 years of age30.
For the AIDS mortality rates in the period from 2008 to 2012, the average was 6.3 using the deaths reported in the SIM. However, when we recalculated the rates in our study adding the underreported deaths, the average for the period increased to 6.6 (per 100,000 inhabitants). The study of Guimarães et. al. compared the official mortality rates used by the Brazilian Ministry of Health and the estimated rates produced in the GBD-2015 study, which are based on complex modelling using multiple data sources. The mortality rates presented by the Ministry of Health ranged from 6.3 in 2000 to 5.7 in 2014, and the GBD-2015 study ranged from 9.6 in 2000 to 9.5 in 2015 (per 100,000 inhabitants). Our values, although still far from the values estimated by the GBD, are higher than the official mortality rates used by the Ministry of Health31.
There are methodological issues that may explain, at least partially, the lower percentage of underreporting found in our study as compared to the studies mentioned above. The underreporting of AIDS deaths refers to those who had been registered in the SIM as a wrongly classified cause, not to those who had not been registered. As for the SIH database, although it is a national database, it does not include about 20% of the total number of hospitalizations attributed to private hospitals not agreed by SUS. In this study, it was observed that 8.4% of deaths due to AIDS in the SIM occurred outside the hospital, which suggests that there may be underreported deaths occurring outside the hospital throughout the country32. Linkage procedures are never perfect23. For this process to be ideal, it would require a unique identifier as well as the integrity of the databases to be linked. Another point to consider is that there are limitations in the ICD-10 coding rules. For example, visceral leishmaniasis (VL) is a disease classically associated with AIDS immunodeficiency and is not included in the coding rules of ICD-1033. Deaths due to VL that were found had previous hospitalizations due to AIDS and could be counted as underreported AIDS deaths, if the rules were in fact inclusive. The rules also do not mention what to do when the code R75 ICD-10 (laboratory evidence of HIV) is mentioned in the lines of causes of the DC. This code should not be listed but, in reality, it was listed in some DC and the coders ended up using this information, along with other causes, to define AIDS as the underlying cause of death. In other words, the rules do not cover all possibilities.
Deaths that we classified as type D underreporting (death with a current hospitalization due to AIDS, but not type A, B or C), can be considered quite inclusive, since, with the exception of external causes, all other causes were classified as AIDS. This is because the main AIDS diagnosis in the hospitalization registry in which the death occurred was considered important enough to be selected in the study methodology as the underlying cause of death34,35.
There may be some explanations contributing for the underreporting of AIDS deaths in the country. First, AIDS may not have been diagnosed in the hospitalization where the death occurred, only in previous hospitalizations, so the certifying physician did not have this information and therefore did not place it in the DC. This may have occurred in patients who had not yet been diagnosed with the infection/disease, or due to lack of specific HIV/AIDS data in the patient\'s medical records. Not all people living with HIV in Brazil know their HIV status, only about 80-85%. By 2020, one of the UNAIDS targets is that 90% of all people living with HIV should have their HIV status know36. Some studies point to a worrying tendency to achieve a reduction in AIDS deaths in the country, explained in part by the late diagnosis of HIV, with over 10% of HIV diagnoses being made only at death, in addition to low adherence to treatment37. Second, the certifying physician may have been aware that the patient died of AIDS but deliberately decided to omit this information from the DC. There may be a variety of reasons for this. The decedents’ family members may have requested their doctors not to do so, because of the strong social stigma attached to HIV/AIDS, or for health or life insurance issues38. Third, the certifying physician may have been aware that the patient died of AIDS but neglected or simply was not able to adequately complete the DC. It is unfortunately rather common for the physician to list only the mechanism of death rather than the UCD (for example, cardiorespiratory arrest). Incomplete or inaccurate records of the cause of death can also occur due to lack of time, lack of interest of the doctors in the patient\'s history and lack of knowledge of these professionals on the correct completion of the DC and on its importance for establishing public health priorities34,38.
In conclusion, this study demonstrated that, using the linkage in between the SIH and the SIM, it is possible to find underreported AIDS deaths in Brazil. Our results serve as an alert for the need of actions to promote better certification of causes of death among HIV/AIDS patients and to continue working towards increasing the reliability of the SIM records. The study can be repeated over time and complemented with other databases in addition to the SIH, such as private hospital or insurance databases.
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