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. 2007 Feb 7;62(7):581–587. doi: 10.1136/thx.2006.061572

Development and validation of database indexes of asthma severity and control

Faranak Firoozi 1,2, Catherine Lemière 1,2, Marie‐France Beauchesne 1,2, Amélie Forget 1,2, Lucie Blais 1,2
PMCID: PMC2117251  PMID: 17287299

Abstract

Background

The use of administrative databases to perform epidemiological studies in asthma has increased in recent years. The absence of clinical parameters to measure the level of asthma severity and control is a major limitation of database studies. A study was undertaken to develop and validate two database indexes to measure the control and severity of asthma.

Methods

Database indexes of asthma severity and control were derived from definitions in the Canadian Asthma Consensus Guidelines based on dispensed prescriptions and on medical services recorded in two large administrative databases from the Canadian province of Québec (Régie de l'Assurance Maladie du Québec (RAMQ) and MED‐ECHO) over 12 months. The database indexes of asthma severity and control were validated against the pulmonary function test results of 71 patients with asthma randomly selected from two asthma clinics, and they were also applied to a cohort of patients with asthma followed up for 139 283 person‐years selected from the RAMQ and MED‐ECHO databases between 1 January 1997 and 31 December 2004.

Results

According to the database indexes, 49.3%, 29.6% and 21.1% of patients recruited at the asthma clinics were found to have mild, moderate and severe asthma, respectively, while 53.5% were found to have controlled asthma. The mean predicted value of the forced expiratory volume in 1 s (FEV1) ranged from 89.8% for mild asthma to 61.5% for severe asthma (p<0.001), whereas the range from controlled to uncontrolled asthma was 89.5% to 67.3% (p<0.001). The ratio of the FEV1 to the forced vital capacity (FEV1/FVC ratio) measured in 56 patients ranged from 75.8% for mild asthma to 61.8% for severe asthma (p = 0.030), whereas the range from controlled to uncontrolled asthma was 75.3% to 65.7% (p<0.001).

Conclusion

In the absence of clinical data, these database indexes could be used in epidemiological studies to assess the severity and control of asthma.


The accurate classification of asthma severity and control is a significant challenge since they are conceptually related and there is an overlap in some of the criteria used in their assessment. The optimal control of asthma has been defined by the presence of minimal respiratory symptoms, no activity limitation, normal respiratory function and absence of the need for rescue bronchodilator.1,2,3 The current series of criteria used in assessing the control of asthma were established by the Global Initiative for Asthma (GINA) and the Canadian Asthma Consensus Guidelines,2,3 and include daytime and nocturnal symptoms, the occurrence of asthma exacerbations, the need for inhaled short‐acting β2 agonists (SABA), physical activity, absenteeism and forced expiratory volume in 1 s (FEV1) or peak expiratory flow (PEF) values.

Different methods are advocated by various guidelines to assess asthma severity.1,2,3 The GINA guidelines and the US National Asthma Education and Prevention Program consensus guidelines rely on evaluation of the inherent symptoms of the disease and the patient's lung function before instigating any treatment relative to the assessment of its severity.1,2 However, the Canadian Asthma Consensus Guidelines assess asthma severity once the treatment has been instigated and use a combination of factors, many of which overlap with measures of symptom control. These include pulmonary function tests, treatment required to obtain asthma control, history of hospital admissions and life‐threatening asthma attacks.3

The use of administrative health databases to perform epidemiological studies in asthma has increased in recent years.4,5,6 The absence of clinical parameters to measure the level of asthma severity and control has always been considered one of the limitations of using administrative databases in this field of research. The development of indexes of asthma severity and of asthma control based on electronically available data is therefore desirable. Indeed, it is important to be able to measure asthma severity and control separately since, for example, in some studies it might be necessary to evaluate the control of asthma following a new treatment strategy, while in others it might be necessary to measure the level of severity of asthma before starting a new treatment.

Several validated multidimensional indexes of asthma control and severity have been developed for use in epidemiological and clinical studies.7,8,9,10,11,12 These indexes are usually based on one or several factors that are considered clinically important in the assessment of asthma severity and control such as frequency, duration and intensity of symptoms and pulmonary function tests. However, to the best of our knowledge, none of these indexes relies solely on data usually recorded in administrative health databases.

The aim of this study was to develop and validate two database indexes, one to measure the control of asthma and the other to measure the severity of asthma in currently treated patients with asthma, using information related to dispensed asthma medications and medical services obtained from the administrative healthcare databases of the Canadian province of Québec.

Methods

Source of data

Our database indexes of asthma severity and control are based on variables recorded in two administrative databases of the Province of Québec, Canada: Régie de l'Assurance‐Maladie du Québec (RAMQ) and MED‐ECHO. The RAMQ database provides information on medical services dispensed to all residents of Québec and on prescribed medications provided to residents covered by the RAMQ's Prescription Drug Insurance Plan. Approximately 43% of the population of Québec is covered by the RAMQ's Prescription Drug Insurance Plan which mainly includes older people, social aid recipients since 1980 and about 1.7 million new adherents since 1997, mostly workers and their families who, in socioeconomic terms, represent the average population.13 The RAMQ's Prescription Drug Insurance Plan database provides information on dispensed medications (date of filling, name, dose, quantity, dosage form and duration of the prescription) while the RAMQ's Medical Services database provides information on medical services dispensed in a clinic, an emergency department (ED) or a hospital (date and diagnosis coded with ICD‐9). The RAMQ's databases also provide sociodemographic data such as age, sex, social aid status and, where relevant, date of death. Data recorded in the RAMQ's Prescription Drug Insurance database and asthma diagnoses recorded in the RAMQ's Medical Services database have been formally evaluated and deemed valid.14,15

The MED‐ECHO database is a provincial database which records data on acute care hospital admissions and covers all residents of Québec. For each hospital admission we obtained data on the primary and up to 15 secondary discharge diagnoses, date of admission, duration of hospital stay and treatments received while in hospital.15

Description of database indexes of asthma severity and control

The database indexes of asthma severity and control that we developed are based on the criteria detailed in the Canadian Asthma Consensus Guidelines for assessment of the severity and control of patients with asthma who are already taking anti‐asthma medications.3 Three levels of asthma severity and two levels of asthma control were defined over a 12 month period based on the following: average daily dose of inhaled corticosteroid (ICS) in beclomethasone‐chlorofluorocarbon equivalent; the use of additional controller therapies defined as at least six filled prescriptions of inhaled long‐acting β2 agonists (LABA), theophylline or leucotriene receptor antagonists within a 12 month period; the average number of doses of SABA per week; and the presence of markers of moderate to severe asthma exacerbations (a filled prescription for oral corticosteroids, an ED visit for asthma, or a hospital admission for asthma).16

Details of the two database indexes are presented in table 1. Briefly, the mild asthma category corresponds to ICS doses of 0–500 μg/day for patients not receiving additional controller therapy and ICS doses of 0–250 μg/day for patients receiving additional controller therapy. Moreover, in order to be classified in this mild category, a patient must not have had a marker of a moderate to severe asthma exacerbation nor have used more than an average of three doses of SABA per week during the 12 month period under study. The moderate asthma category corresponds to ICS doses of >500 μg/day for patients not receiving additional controller therapy or doses of >250 μg/day for those receiving additional controller therapy, except for patients with a high use of SABA and moderate to severe asthma exacerbations. Severe asthma is mainly characterised by ICS doses of >1000 μg/day, except for patients with both markers of uncontrolled asthma; for example, patients who are taking more than 10 doses of SABA per week and a marker for a moderate to severe asthma exacerbation.

Table 1 Definition of the database indexes of asthma severity and control developed according to the Canadian Asthma Consensus Guidelines.

Asthma severity and control ICS daily dose* (μg) Other controller therapy† SABA doses per week‡ Marker of moderate to severe exacerbations§
Mild
 Controlled 0–500 No 0–3 No
0–250 Yes 0–3 No
 Uncontrolled 0–250 Yes 0–3 Yes
0–500 No 0–3 Yes
0–250 Yes 4–10 No
0–500 No 4–10 No
Moderate
 Controlled 251–500 Yes 0–10 No
501–1000 Yes/no 0–10 No
>1000 Yes/no 0–3 No
 Uncontrolled 0–250 Yes 4–10 Yes
0–500 No 4–10 Yes
0–250 Yes >10 No
0–500 No >10 No
251–500 Yes >10 No
251–500 Yes 0–10 Yes
501–1000 Yes/no >10 No
501–1000 Yes/no 0–10 Yes
Severe
 Controlled >1000 Yes/no 4–10 No
 Uncontrolled 0–1000 Yes/no >10 Yes
>1000 Yes/no 0–10 Yes
>1000 Yes/no >10 Yes/no

ICS, inhaled corticosteroid; SABA, short‐acting β2 agonist.

*Daily dose of ICS in beclomethasone‐chlorofluorocarbon equivalent over a 12 month period.

†Other controller therapy: at least six prescriptions of long‐acting β2 agonist, theophylline or leucotriene receptor antagonists dispensed over a 12 month period.

‡Average number of inhaled short‐acting β2 agonist doses per week calculated over a 12 month period.

§An emergency department visit for asthma, a hospital admission for asthma or a filled prescription of an oral corticosteroid over a 12 month period.

Patients were considered as controlled if they had no marker for moderate to severe asthma exacerbations and were taking no more than 3 doses of SABA per week for mild asthma and 10 doses of SABA per week for moderate and severe asthma.

Using data from the RAMQ's databases, an algorithm was developed to calculate the mean daily dose of ICS and the mean weekly dose of SABA on the basis of prescription renewals, quantity of medication dispensed, duration of the prescription and time intervals between renewals.17,18 In order to calculate the equivalence of the mean daily dose of ICS into beclomethasone‐chlorofluorocarbon, we used the equivalency table published in the Canadian Asthma Consensus Guidelines.3 The pharmacist established the equivalencies for SABA; for example, one dose of SABA was equivalent to two inhalations of salbutamol from a metered dose inhaler (100 μg/inhalation).19

Validation of database indexes of asthma severity and control

In order to validate the database indexes of asthma severity and control, we applied them to the administrative database information available for a sample of patients with asthma recruited in two different asthma clinics. We then compared the actual mean pulmonary function test values for these patients across the classification categories to determine if pulmonary function corresponded with our indexes of severity and control. All the patients had a confirmed diagnosis of asthma with no diagnosis of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD). Fifty‐six patients with asthma were recruited from the Montreal Chest Institute between May 2001 and February 2002. The most recent measures of FEV1 (predicted value) and FEV1/FVC were retrieved from their medical charts. Fifteen patients with asthma were recruited from the asthma clinic of the Hôpital du Sacré‐Coeur de Montréal (HSCM) between January and March 2003 and their most recent FEV1 value was obtained from the medical chart. However, the FEV1/FVC values were unavailable for this set of patients.

Information concerning the use of prescribed medications, history of hospital admissions and ED visits for asthma was obtained from the RAMQ and MED‐ECHO databases for all patients. The data obtained from the RAMQ and MED‐ECHO provided us with the necessary information to classify the severity and control for each patient using our database indexes.

Application of database indexes of asthma severity and control

Our database indexes of asthma severity and control were applied in a cohort of patients with asthma from Québec in order to obtain the distribution of asthma severity and control as classified by our indexes at a population level. The Québec cohort comprised 139 283 person‐years of follow‐up of patients with asthma aged 14–44 years selected from RAMQ and MED‐ECHO databases between 1 January 1997 and 31 December 2004. In order to be included in the cohort, patients had to have been diagnosed with asthma at least once between 1 January 1997 and 31 December 2004. Furthermore, their medications must have been covered by the RAMQ Prescription Drug Insurance Plan for at least 1 year before and 1 year after the index date (defined as 1 January after being diagnosed with asthma). Based on the aforementioned conditions, all the non‐overlapping 1 year periods that fulfilled our criteria were identified. A patient could therefore contribute more than one episode of 1 year of follow‐up into the cohort. The level of asthma severity and control was evaluated for each 1 year period included in the cohort using our database indexes. Data on dispensed medications, medical services and sociodemographic data were provided by the RAMQ while data relating to hospital admissions were supplied by MED‐ECHO for all patients included in the cohort.

Comparison of distribution of asthma severity levels across different study populations and severity indexes

For validation purposes, the distribution of the severity levels found in the Québec cohort using our database index of severity was compared with the distribution of the severity levels found in different populations worldwide using other severity indexes. The first severity index used for comparison was based on the GINA classification of symptoms and FEV1 which was applied in a sample of 4362 patients with asthma (51% women) aged 16–45 years examined by clinical specialists in private practice throughout France between 3 and 28 May 1993.20 The second severity index used for comparison was also based on the measure of asthma severity reported in the GINA guidelines (frequency of symptoms) and was used in a sample of 2509 patients with asthma identified in the Asthma Insights and Reality (AIR) survey conducted in the USA in 1998.21 The third severity index with which our index was compared was based on patient's reported daily medication usage and was used in a sample of 1279 patients with asthma who had completed a telephone questionnaire and had filled inhaler prescriptions in community pharmacies in Ontario, Canada.7

Statistical analysis

The differences in mean FEV1 (percent predicted value) were compared between the levels of asthma severity and control within the sample of patients recruited at the asthma clinics. We also performed the same analysis stratified by age (⩽45 and >45 years). A cut‐off point of 45 years was used for this stratified analysis because the diagnosis of asthma is unlikely to be confused with a diagnosis of COPD in patients aged <45 years. Moreover, 45 years was the median age of the patient sample from the clinics, and patients <45 years of age would be more easily comparable to the patients in the Québec cohort. The comparison of the FEV1/FVC ratio between levels of asthma severity and control was only completed for patients recruited at the Montreal Chest Institute. Using the Student's t test for independent samples, two‐tailed pairwise comparisons were performed and p values of <0.05 were considered significant. No adjustment for multiple testing was performed. The distribution of the levels of asthma severity and control using our database indexes was estimated among the Québec cohort of patients with asthma. All statistical analyses were performed using SAS Version 8.02.

Ethical considerations

The link between the data obtained from the RAMQ database, the MED‐ECHO database and the medical chart was made with a unique patient's identifier (patient health number) which is included in each database and medical chart. This link was approved by the Commission d'accès à l'information du Québec. This research project was approved by the ethics board of the Hôpital du Sacré‐Cœur de Montréal and the Montreal Chest Institute.

Results

Characteristics of study population

The characteristics of the patients from the asthma clinics and the Québec cohort are shown in table 2. The mean age of the 139 283 person‐years of patients with asthma in the Québec cohort was lower than that for those from the asthma clinics (30.3 vs 49.0 years). Patients from the asthma clinics used more ICS than those in the Québec cohort (71.8% vs 63.0%). The use of more than 10 doses of SABA per week was higher in patients from the asthma clinics than in those in the Québec cohort (26.8% vs 24.0%). In the sample of patients from the asthma clinics, 11.3% had at least one ED visit and 4.2% had at least one hospital admission for asthma over a 12 month period compared with 18.1% and 6.2%, respectively, for patients in the Québec cohort.

Table 2 Characteristics of study population over a 12 month period.

Patients selected from asthma clinics (n = 71) Quebec cohort of asthmatic patients* (n = 139 283 person‐years)
Mean (SD) age (years) 49.0 (17.8) 30.3 (8.7)
Women (%) 62.9 62.2
ICS use, μg per day (%)†
 0 28.2 37.0
 1–250 15.5 34.3
 251–500 18.3 11.9
 501–1000 18.3 10.9
 >1000 19.7 5.9
SABA, number of doses per week (%)‡
 0–3 57.7 53.6
 4–10 15.5 22.4
 >10 26.8 24.0
LABA use (%) 54.9 23.4
Theophylline use (%) 9.9 2.3
Leucotriene receptor antagonist use (%) 21.1 7.7
Oral corticosteroid use (%) 31.0 16.5
Respiratory physician visit (%) 98.6 12.3
ED care for asthma (%) 11.3 18.1
Hospital care for asthma (%) 4.2 6.2

ICS, inhaled corticosteroid; SABA, short‐acting β2 agonist; LABA, long‐acting β2 agonist; ED, emergency department.

*On average, patients contributed 2.1 episodes of 1 year into the cohort. The cohort comprises patients with asthma selected from 1 January 1997 to 31 December 2004.

†ICS daily dose in beclomethasone‐chlorofluorocarbon equivalent over a 12 month period.

‡Average number of inhaled short‐acting β2 agonist doses per week calculated over a 12 month period.

Application of database index of asthma severity and control

The distribution of the levels of asthma severity and control based on our database indexes for the sample of 71 patients from the asthma clinics and the Québec cohort is shown in table 3. Among patients from the asthma clinics, 35 (49.3%), 21 (29.6%) and 15 (21.1%) had mild, moderate and severe asthma, respectively. Overall, in the asthma clinic sample, 46.5% of patients were classified as having poorly controlled asthma; of those we classified as mild, moderate or severe, 20.0%, 57.1% and 93.3%, respectively, had poorly controlled asthma by our criteria. When this sample was stratified by age, younger patients were found to be more likely to have mild asthma and controlled asthma than older patients. In the Québec cohort 63.4%, 22.6% and 14.0%, respectively, had mild, moderate and severe asthma and 54.5% had uncontrolled asthma.

Table 3 Distribution of levels of asthma severity and control.

Patients from asthma clinics Quebec cohort of patients with asthma (n = 139 283 person‐years)
All patients (n = 71) Patients ⩽45 years (n = 34) Patients >45 years (n = 37)
Mild 35 (49.3) 20 (58.8) 15 (40.5) 88 250 (63.4)
 Controlled 28 (80.0) 17 (85.0) 11 (73.3) 57 529 (65.2)
 Uncontrolled 7 (20.0) 3 (15.0) 4 (26.7) 30 721 (34.8)
Moderate 21 (29.6) 9 (26.5) 12 (32.4) 31 552 (22.6)
 Controlled 9 (42.9) 4 (44.4) 5 (41.7) 5 488 (17.4)
 Uncontrolled 12 (57.1) 5 (55.6) 7 (58.3) 26 064 (82.6)
Severe 15 (21.1) 5 (14.7) 10 (27.0) 19 481 (14.0)
 Controlled 1 (6.7) 0 (0.0) 1 (10.0) 377 (1.9)
 Uncontrolled 14 (93.3) 5 (100.0) 9 (90.0) 19 104 (98.1)
Controlled 38 (53.5) 21 (61.8) 17 (45.9) 63394 (45.5)
Uncontrolled 33 (46.5) 13 (38.2) 20 (54.1) 75889 (54.5)

Data shown as number (%).

Validation of database indexes of asthma severity and control

The results of the analyses performed to validate our database indexes against pulmonary function measures are shown in table 4. For the index of severity, among the 71 patients from the asthma clinics, the mean predicted value of FEV1 was found to be 89.8% for mild asthma, 74.1% for moderate asthma and 61.5% for severe asthma. All pairwise comparisons of FEV1 between the three levels of asthma severity were found to be statistically significant (p = 0.007 for moderate vs mild asthma, p<0.001 for severe vs mild asthma and p = 0.033 for severe vs moderate asthma). In the sample of 56 patients from the Montreal Chest Institute, the FEV1/FVC ratio ranged from 75.8% for mild asthma to 61.8% for severe asthma. Pairwise comparisons of the ratio were found to be statistically significant for mild versus moderate asthma (p = 0.006) and for mild versus severe asthma (p = 0.030), but the observed difference between moderate and severe asthma was not found to be statistically significant (p = 0.205).

Table 4 Comparison of database indexes of asthma severity and control against lung function measures.

Variable N Mean p Value
Asthma severity (N = 71)
Mild FEV1 predicted % 35 89.8
Moderate FEV1 predicted % 21 74.1 0.007*
Severe FEV1 predicted % 15 61.5 <0.001†
0.033‡
N = 56
Mild FEV1/FVC 30 75.8
Moderate FEV1/FVC 18 68.1 0.006*
Severe FEV1/FVC 8 61.8 0.030†
0.205‡
Asthma control (N = 71)
Controlled FEV1 predicted % 38 89.5
Uncontrolled FEV1 predicted % 33 67.3 <0.001
N = 56
Controlled FEV1/FVC 33 75.3
Uncontrolled FEV1/FVC 23 65.7 0.001

FEV1, forced expiratory volume in 1 s; FVC, forced vital capacity.

*Moderate vs mild asthma.

†Severe vs mild asthma.

‡Severe vs moderate asthma.

For the index of control, patients classified as well controlled had a mean FEV1 of 89.5% and a FEV1/FVC ratio of 75.3%, and those classified as poorly controlled had a mean FEV1 of 67.3% and a FEV1/FVC ratio of 65.7% using different subsets of clinic patients for the FEV1 and FEV1/FVC comparisons, as described in the Methods section. Differences between controlled and uncontrolled patients were found to be statistically significant (p<0.001 for differences in FEV1 and for differences in FEV1/FVC ratio).

The results of the analysis comparing FEV1 across the different levels of asthma severity and control stratified by age (⩽45 and >45 years) are shown in table 5. Statistically significant differences were observed for all pairwise comparisons between severity levels except for the comparison of moderate and severe asthma in younger patients and the comparison of mild and moderate asthma in older patients. Differences in FEV1 between controlled and uncontrolled patients were statistically significant in both subgroups.

Table 5 Age‐stratified comparison of database indexes of asthma severity and control and FEV1 measures.

Variable N Mean p Value
Asthma severity
⩽45 years (N = 34)
 Mild FEV1 predicted % 20 95.2
 Moderate FEV1 predicted % 9 68.7 0.002*
 Severe FEV1 predicted % 5 61.1 0.002†
0.519‡
>45 years (N = 37)
 Mild FEV1 predicted % 15 82.6
 Moderate FEV1 predicted % 12 78.1 0.552*
 Severe FEV1 predicted % 10 61.6 0.026†
0.015‡
Asthma control
⩽45 years (N = 34)
 Controlled FEV1 predicted % 21 92.0
 Uncontrolled FEV1 predicted % 13 68.9 0.004
>45 years (N = 37)
 Controlled FEV1 predicted % 17 86.4
 Uncontrolled FEV1 predicted % 20 66.2 0.004

FEV1, forced expiratory volume in 1 s.

*Moderate vs mild asthma.

†Severe vs mild asthma.

‡Severe vs moderate asthma.

Comparison of distribution of asthma severity among different populations

The comparison of the distribution of asthma severity in the Québec cohort assessed against our database index and the distribution of asthma severity in other populations worldwide assessed against other severity indexes is presented in table 6. In the Québec cohort the distribution of severity levels was 63%, 23% and 14% for mild, moderate and severe asthma, respectively. This distribution was similar to those of two of the three study populations: 59–66% for mild asthma, around 22% for moderate asthma and 13–19% for severe asthma. However, the Ontario population had a different distribution of severity with 28% for mild asthma, 49% for moderate asthma and 23% for severe asthma.

Table 6 Comparison of the distribution of asthma severity (%) based on different indexes applied to different populations.

Cohort of asthmatic patients, Quebec, Canada* (n = 139 283 person‐years) Cohort of asthmatic patients, France20† (n = 4333) AIR America survey, USA21‡ (n = 2509) Cohort of asthmatic patients, Ontario, Canada7§ (n = 1279)
Mild asthma 63 66 59 28
Moderate asthma 23 21 22 49
Severe asthma 14 13 19 23

*Index based on dispensed medications and medical services for asthma.

†Index based on symptoms and forced expiratory volume in 1 s (FEV1).

‡Index based on symptoms and the current state of asthma management.

§Index based on reported daily medication use.

Discussion

We have shown that our database indexes of asthma severity and control correlate well with lung function measures such as FEV1 and the FEV1/FVC ratio, which are reliable indices reflecting asthma severity and control.1,3 Moreover, the application of our database severity index to a population‐based cohort of patients with asthma led to a distribution of asthma severity similar to that found with other severity indexes applied in two of the three comparison samples.

The need to adjust for the level of asthma severity and control to minimise confounding is encountered in most epidemiological studies of asthma. However, these disease characteristics are not always easy to measure because of the lack of clinical data, especially in studies performed with administrative databases. To the best of our knowledge, our indexes of asthma severity and control are the first of this kind to be entirely based on data available from health administrative databases, and it will be possible to use them in future epidemiological studies in asthma.

Differences in the distribution of asthma severity and control found in the populations we studied are worthy of comment. Patients followed in asthma clinics of tertiary healthcare centres are more likely to have moderate or severe asthma and are more properly controlled because they benefit from follow‐up by respiratory specialists. Our results reflect this, since the percentage of controlled patients in each level of severity was greater among patients from the asthma clinics than those from the Québec cohort. Moreover, we found that patients treated in asthma clinics were more likely to suffer from severe asthma, according to our criteria, than patients in the Québec cohort.

Our results also showed that the distribution of the level of asthma severity obtained by applying our database index to the Québec cohort was close to the distribution found with two of the three asthma severity indexes based on symptoms and pulmonary function that have been used in populations in France and the USA.20,21 The distribution of severity found in the study conducted in Ontario was different from that found in the Québec cohort, which may be due to differences in the definition of severity. According to the Ontario index, patients were classified as having mild asthma if they used only bronchodilators to treat asthma and as having moderate or severe asthma when they were prescribed ICS while, in our index of severity, patients with a low dose of ICS could be classified as having mild asthma. Indeed, the other two indexes resemble ours more closely than the Ontario index.

This study has some limitations. First, with our database indexes it was sometimes difficult to distinguish precisely the difference between asthma severity and control since the markers of exacerbations and use of rescue medications were used in both definitions. The overlap in the definitions of asthma severity and control could also mean that the asthma was more uncontrolled in patients with severe asthma than in those with mild disease. This overlap could also have had an effect in the validation against FEV1 and FEV1/FVC measures in the asthma clinic population since these pulmonary function values may reflect both severity and control. However, the difficulty in making a clear distinction between asthma severity and control is not specific to our indexes and is also encountered in clinical practice.22 Second, our database index of severity was developed to measure disease severity in patients already treated for asthma and is based, at least in part, on the level of medication needed to attain control.3 Moreover, our indexes were validated in patients who were likely to be compliant with their treatment because they were under the care of respiratory specialists. However, with respect to general clinical practice, a proportion of patients will not attain control and this might reduce the capacity of our severity index to classify patients accurately. Third, our database index of control cannot detect short‐term changes since it is based on medications and healthcare services dispensed over a 1 year period. A fourth limit of our study concerns the use of a single measure of lung function to validate the indexes. Use of only one measure of lung function might not be optimal for assessing a parameter that can fluctuate over time. Moreover, since the FEV1/FVC ratio was available only for a subset of patients from the clinics, we were not able to perform the age‐stratified analysis for this measure. Fifth, the patients included in the Québec cohort were not fully representative of the population since they did not include patients with private drug insurance plans and tended to over‐represent patients of low to moderate socioeconomic status.

This study also has several strengths. The database indexes can assess asthma severity and control among patients already treated for asthma and are, at least in part, based on the use of acute care for asthma which is a well recognised marker of asthma severity and lack of control.3 Moreover, the data obtained from the Prescription Drug Insurance database regarding the mean dose of ICS and SABA are considered to be a good reflection of usual dosage.23,24,25,26,27 Our indexes were validated against pulmonary function measures that are well established measures of asthma severity and control. Moreover, the age‐stratified analysis allowed us to assess the validity of our database index across different age groups. Finally, the distribution of asthma severity found with our database index when applied to the Québec cohort was found to be comparable to the distribution of severity assessed with other indexes applied to two of the three different population samples we used for comparison.

In conclusion, we have shown that the database indexes that we developed based on dispensed asthma medications and medical services are valid to the extent that we could test this and could adequately classify currently treated patients with asthma into categories of severity and control. In the absence of clinical data, our database indexes could be used in epidemiological studies using administrative databases reasonably to assess the severity and control of asthma among adult patients and thus improve the quality of database studies in the field of asthma. Further research will be needed to confirm these findings and to adapt and validate these database indexes for use in special populations including pregnant women, older people and children.

Acknowledgements

The authors thank Ms Brigitte Morin from the Régie de l'assurance maladie du Quebec (RAMQ) for her assistance with the data and Mr Hatch for the English revision of the manuscript.

Abbreviations

COPD - chronic obstructive pulmonary disease

ED - emergency department

ICS - inhaled corticosteroid

FEV1 - forced expiratory volume in 1 s

LABA - long‐acting β2 agonist

PEF - peak expiratory flow

SABA - short‐acting β2 agonist

Footnotes

LB and CL are the recipients of a New Investigator Award for salary support from the Canadian Institutes for Health Research (CIHR); LB and M‐FB hold the AstraZeneca Chair in Respiratory Health; and FF is the recipient of a Doctoral Training Award from the Fonds de la Recherche en Santé du Quebec (FRSQ).

Competing interests: None.

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