Summary
Background: The cause-of-death register at the Southern Urals Biophysics Institute (SUBI), Ozyorsk,
Russia, was established to document the number and causes of deaths in the Mayak workers
cohort, which includes all persons (N = 22,377) employed at Mayak nuclear facility
between 1948 and 1982. Most workers were occupationally exposed to high doses of ionizing
radiation and have been shown to have increased risks of various chronic diseases
including cancer.
Objectives: To investigate the quality of cause of death coding in the SUBI register.
Methods: A random sample of 246 deaths (~1% of the total) was coded independently at the SUBI
and the Danish Cancer Society using the International Classification of Diseases 9
(ICD-9). Proportions of matching codes were calculated.
Results: Overall, 233 deaths (95%) were identically classified using the ICD-9 main category
matching. Excluding mismatches that were considered to be incorrectly coded during
validation, the validity of the register increased to 98%. Using the specific ICD-9
first three-digit matching, 182 deaths were identically coded (74%) and the respective
validity of the register was 85%. There were also some non-resolvable discrepancies
demonstrating limitations of assigning one code for each death or using language-adapted
ICD-9 version.
Conclusions: This validation study was an important quality check of a register used for mortality
follow-up in a highly influential epidemiological study on radiation-related health
effects. The results of the inter-institutional comparison were generally favourable;
however, since the comparison revealed individual mismatches and some systematically
differing coding practices, it is essential to repeat it on a regular basis in order
to maintain a high quality.
Keywords
Mortality register - cause of death - inter-institutional comparison - radiation -
Russia