Replicating a COVID-19 study in a national England database to assess the generalisability of research with regional electronic health record data
, ed. (2025) Replicating a COVID-19 study in a national England database to assess the generalisability of research with regional electronic health record data. BMJ Open, 15 (4). e093080. ISSN 2044-6055 (https://doi.org/10.1136/bmjopen-2024-093080)
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Abstract
Objectives To assess the degree to which we can replicate a study between a regional and a national database of electronic health record data in the UK. The original study examined the risk factors associated with hospitalisation following COVID-19 infection in people with diabetes. Design A replication of a retrospective cohort study. Setting Observational electronic health record data from primary and secondary care sources in the UK. The original study used data from a large, urbanised region (Greater Manchester Care Record, Greater Manchester, UK—2.8 m patients). This replication study used a national database covering the whole of England, UK (NHS England’s Secure Data Environment service for England, accessed via the BHF Data Science Centre’s CVD-COVID-UK/COVID-IMPACT Consortium—54 m patients). Participants Individuals with a diagnosis of type 1 diabetes or type 2 diabetes prior to a positive COVID-19 test result. The matched controls (3:1) were individuals who had a positive COVID-19 test result, but who did not have a diagnosis of diabetes on the date of their positive COVID-19 test result. Matching was done on age at COVID-19 diagnosis, sex and approximate date of COVID-19 test. Primary and secondary outcome measures Hospitalisation within 28 days of a positive COVID-19 test. Results We found that many of the effect sizes did not show a statistically significant difference, but that some did. Where effect sizes were statistically significant in the regional study, then they remained significant in the national study and the effect size was the same direction and of similar magnitude. Conclusions There is some evidence that the findings from studies in smaller regional datasets can be extrapolated to a larger, national setting. However, there were some differences, and therefore replication studies remain an essential part of healthcare research.
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Item type: Article ID code: 93775 Dates: DateEvent23 April 2025Published24 March 2025AcceptedSubjects: Medicine Department: Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences (HaSS) > Strathclyde Institute of Education > Education
Faculty of Engineering > Design, Manufacture and Engineering Management
Faculty of Science > Mathematics and Statistics
Faculty of Engineering > Bioengineering
Faculty of Science > Strathclyde Institute of Pharmacy and Biomedical Sciences
Strategic Research Themes > Health and WellbeingDepositing user: Pure Administrator Date deposited: 11 Aug 2025 10:54 Last modified: 09 May 2026 04:29 Related URLs: URI: https://strathprints.strath.ac.uk/id/eprint/93775
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