Reporting and variability of constructing medication treatment episodes in pharmacoepidemiology studies: A methodologic systematic review using the case study of <scp>DPP</scp>‐4 inhibitors and cardiovascular outcomes
Alanna Weisman, Lauren King, Muhammad Mamdani
Abstract
PURPOSE: In pharmacoepidemiologic studies, estimating medication adherence, persistence, and exposure patterns is critical. Constructing medication treatment episodes from prescription claims data involves assumptions related to grace period, carry-over, and lag effect, but there are no guidelines for these assumptions. We evaluated reporting and variability of these parameters in pharmacoepidemiology studies, using a case study of antihyperglycemic medications and major adverse cardiovascular events (MACE). METHODS: We conducted a systemic review using MEDLINE and EMBASE for studies published prior to January 2, 2020 comparing the risk of MACE between dipeptidyl peptidase 4 (DPP-4) inhibitors and active comparators. We extracted study characteristics and results, including grace period, carry-over, and lag effect. Risk of bias was assessed by the Newcastle-Ottawa scale, and assessments for prevalent user, immortal time, time lag, and time window biases. RESULTS: A total of 14/1850 studies identified were included. Grace period was not reported in 5 (35.7%) studies and ranged from 0 days to 180 days when reported. Carry-over was not reported in 10 studies (71.4%). Lag effect was not reported in nine (71.4%) studies and ranged from 0 days to 180 days when reported. No studies conducted sensitivity analyses examining the effects of these assumptions on study findings. Predominant biases were inadequate follow-up time, comparability of cohorts, prevalent use, and lag time bias. CONCLUSIONS: Use of grace period, carry-over, and lag effect were poorly reported and highly variable. Future pharmacoepidemiology studies should improve reporting, justify ranges for these parameters, and conduct sensitivity analyses to evaluate effects of these assumptions.