JMIR Form Res. 2025 Dec 29. doi: 10.2196/81499. Online ahead of print.
ABSTRACT
BACKGROUND: Suicide is the second leading cause of death for children and adolescents aged 6 to 18 years old. Pediatric suicidality is underreported, which poses significant challenges for effective intervention and prevention strategies. Identifying populations at risk for suicidality can provide critical benefits in terms of study cohort selection, prevalence estimation, and clinical resource allocation.
OBJECTIVE: This study sought to (1) measure the prevalence of mental health comorbidities in pediatric suicidality, and (2) identify undiagnosed high-risk suicidality cases by matching patients with similar mental health comorbidity burden.
METHODS: Electronic health record data from a large academic pediatric hospital in Boston, Massachusetts, were analyzed for patients aged 6-18 years old presenting to the emergency department between June 1, 2016, and June 1, 2022. Suicidality cases were defined using ICD-10 codes for three suicidality subtypes: suicidal ideation, self-harm, and suicide attempt. Comorbidities of suicidality were calculated as the conditional probability of ICD-10 code pairs. After multiple hypothesis corrections, statistically significant comorbidities and patient encounter demographics were input as covariates into a propensity score matching (PSM) model. Accuracy of the PSM model was validated against chart review by two independent subject matter experts.
RESULTS: In total, 2,638 ED encounters met an ICD-10-based case definition of suicidality during the study period. The prevalence of suicidality (2.9%) by subtype was ideation (2.5%), self-harm (1.1%), and attempt (0.2%). Suicidality prevalence was more common for female sex (4.2%) than male sex (1.7%). Comorbidities of suicidality were statistically significant for 55 frequently co-occurring ICD-10 codes. Nearly half of these comorbidities (26/55) were not present in DSM-5, and nearly a quarter (12/55) consisted of ICD-10 codes for accidental rather than intentional self-harm. Increased probability of suicidality was observed for patients with personality disorder (44%), gender dysphoria (43%), bipolar disorder (36%), depression (33%), and schizophrenia spectrum disorders (32%). Based on gold standard chart review, 53.4% of propensity matched non-cases were unrecognized suicidality cases.
CONCLUSIONS: Propensity score matching using comorbidity profiles is an effective approach for identifying suicidality cases that lack ICD-10 codes for suicidality.
PMID:41525105 | DOI:10.2196/81499