E-records could test drug effectiveness

Published: Feb. 10, 2009 at 5:40 PM

PHILADELPHIA, Feb. 10 (UPI) -- U.S. researchers predict national electronic medical records could test drug efficacy on a par with randomized trials.

However, researchers caution the need for at least 10 years of national data in the United States would be needed before electronic medical record data bases could be used to measure treatment efficacy.

"An appropriately configured electronic medical records data base could offer an invaluable tool, but we need to get to work now on how to configure it properly," study leader Dr. Richard Tannen of the University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine in Philadelphia says in a statement.

In the study, published in the British Medical Journal, Tannen's team examined outcomes measured by six previously performed randomized trials and the incidence of stroke, heart attack or death in a group of 8 million patients -- Britain's general practice research database.

After standard bio-statistical methods adjusted for differences in the database's treated and untreated groups there was no differences between database outcomes and randomized clinical trials in nine out of 17 outcomes. New biostatistical methods used to control for differences prior to the time the study began eliminated the remaining differences

The researchers say their findings show an electronic databases combined with new biostatistical methods could yield valid results.

"That's the real message of our paper -- this can work," Tannen says.

© 2009 United Press International, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
Order reprints



Additional News Stories
Your Daily Horoscope
The almanac
Couple gets stuck on Christmas tree hunt
Clinton thrilled by daughter's engagement
NBA: LA Lakers 108, Miami 107
NHL: Minnesota 5, Anaheim 4 (SO)
NBA: Utah 96, Indiana 87
fark
Convincing prison guards those tomato plants you're growing is not marijuana for 5 months? That...
Dutch apologize for massacring American Indians over 400 years ago. Still no apology for Heineken...
Overweight, 57-year-old teacher strips during class: "I was trying to be cool"
Man has heart attack in hospital parking lot. Hospital refuses to help unless his son calls 911...
X-files become ex-file
Man briefly detained for possession of a handgun. A handgun made out of Legos. That he built while...