Research: A Comparison of Active and Passive Surveillance Strategies for Selected Birth Defects in New York

Birth Defects Res

. 2024 Sep;116(9):e2399.

 doi: 10.1002/bdr2.2399. https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/39238173/

A Comparison of Active and Passive Surveillance Strategies for Selected Birth Defects in New York

Meredith M Howley 1 2Eva Williford 1Amanda M St Louis 1Adrian M Michalski 1Marilyn L Browne 1 2Sarah C Fisher 1

Affiliations Expand

Abstract

Background: The New York State Birth Defects Registry (BDR) has passive and active components. As part of statewide passive ascertainment, the BDR receives reports of International Classification of Diseases, Tenth Revision (ICD-10) codes and descriptive narratives on a wide range of birth defects. The BDR conducts enhanced active surveillance for selected birth defects in 14 counties, which includes medical record abstraction and clinician review. We sought to quantify agreement between the two surveillance approaches.

Methods: The analysis included live-born infants born with one of the 16 birth defects in 2018-2021 in the active surveillance counties (n = 1069 infants). We calculated positive predictive values (PPV) and 95% confidence intervals for each defect, defined as the percentage of cases confirmed in active surveillance among those in passive surveillance. Additionally, we calculated the percentage with each birth defect missed by passive surveillance.

Results: The PPV varied greatly by birth defect. The PPV was >90% for gastroschisis and cleft lip, but <70% for spina bifida, diaphragmatic hernia, truncus arteriosus, tricuspid atresia, hypoplastic left heart syndrome, coarctation of the aorta, and pulmonary atresia. The percentage missed by passive surveillance ranged from 2% for tetralogy of Fallot to 39% for tricuspid atresia.

Conclusions: Active surveillance is an important strategy for ruling out false positive case reports for certain birth defects that we assessed, but not all of them. Passive surveillance programs can use our findings to develop targeted strategies for improving data quality of specific birth defects using active surveillance methods, thus optimizing limited resources.

Keywords: active surveillance; birth defects; passive surveillance; positive predictive value; surveillance.

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