Summary
Background
Healthcare administrative databases are increasingly used for health studies and public health surveillance. Cases of individuals with obesity are selected using case‐identification methods. However, the validity of these methods is fragmentary and particularly challenging for obesity case‐identification.
Objective
The objectives of this systematic review are to (1) determine the case‐identification methods used to identify individuals with obesity in healthcare administrative databases and (2) to summarize the validity of these case‐identification methods when compared with a reference standard.
Methods
A systematic literature search was conducted in six bibliographic databases for the period January 1980 to June 2019 for all studies evaluating obesity case‐identification methods compared to a reference standard.
Results
Seventeen articles met the inclusion criteria. International Classification of Diseases (ICD) codes were the only case‐identification method utilized in selected articles. The performance of obesity‐identification methods varied widely across studies, with positive predictive value ranging from 19% to 100% while sensitivity ranged from 3% to 92%. The sensitivity of these methods was usually low while the specificity was higher.
Conclusion
When obesity is reported in healthcare administrative databases, it is usually correctly reported, however obesity tends to be highly underreported in databases. Therefore, case‐identification methods to monitor the prevalence and incidence of obesity within healthcare administrative databases are not reliable. In contrast, the use of these methods remains relevant for the selection of individuals with obesity for cohort studies, particularly when identifying cohorts of individuals with severe obesity or cohorts where obesity is associated with comorbidities