Enhancing population-level research among people who inject drugs: a validation and retrospective cohort study using health administrative data in Ontario, Canada

Main Article Content

Zoë R Greenwald
Jordan J Feld
Dan Werb
Peter C Austin
Samantha Drover
Daniel Fridman
Ahmed Bayoumi
Tara Gomes
Claire E Kendall
Lauren Lapointe-Shaw
Ayden I Scheim
Sofia R Bartlett
Eric I Benchimol
Zachary Bouck
Christina Greenaway
Naveed Z Janjua
Pamela Leece
William WL Wong
Beate Sander
Jeffrey C Kwong

Abstract

Objective
Health administrative data can support population-level research among people who inject drugs (PWID), however these data sources remain underutilized due to the difficulty in identifying drug use in routinely collected data. We validated case-ascertainment algorithms to identify PWID and tested their application in a hepatitis C (HCV) cohort in Ontario, Canada. 


Approach
We conducted a validation study using reference standard cohorts of PWID recruited via community-based studies and population controls linked to health administrative data in Ontario, Canada (1992-2020). Tested case-ascertainment algorithms included combinations of hospitalizations/emergency department (ED) visits for drug use/poisoning, physician visits for drug use, opioid agonist treatment (OAT), or injecting-related infections. Sensitivity and specificity were estimated for lifetime history and recent injecting (past 1-5 years). We applied a high-performing algorithm among all Ontarians with laboratory-confirmed HCV between 1999-2018, to identify a sub-cohort of PWID with HCV. 


Results
An algorithm including ≥1 hospitalization/ED visit or ≥1 physician visit for drug use or ≥1 OAT record had high accuracy for identifying IDU history (91.6% sensitivity, 94.2% specificity) and recent IDU (using 3 years lookback: 80.4% sensitivity, 99% specificity). When applied to a provincial cohort of 112,947 Ontarians diagnosed with HCV, this algorithm estimated 46% (N=52,248) had a history of IDU, of whom 52% (N=27,246) had an indication of recent IDU (within the past 3 years).  


Conclusion
The methods developed in this study can enhance the capacity of population-level health research among people who inject drugs and support applied public health interventions towards hepatitis C elimination.

Article Details

How to Cite
Greenwald, Z. R., Feld, J. J., Werb, D., Austin, P. C., Drover, S., Fridman, D., Bayoumi, A., Gomes, T., Kendall, C. E., Lapointe-Shaw, L., Scheim, A. I., Bartlett, S. R., Benchimol, E. I., Bouck, Z., Greenaway, C., Janjua, N. Z., Leece, P., Wong, W. W., Sander, B. and Kwong, J. C. (2024) “Enhancing population-level research among people who inject drugs: a validation and retrospective cohort study using health administrative data in Ontario, Canada”, International Journal of Population Data Science, 9(5). doi: 10.23889/ijpds.v9i5.2628.