A partial date is simply any date where the date is incomplete, but not wholly missing. This may be the day or month or year or any combination of two of these. More commonly in clinical trials, the day and/or month are missing. In these cases, we may be asked to impute a reasonable date or time.
Partial dates are most common in variables where the date is historical information (e.g. prior medication, medical history). This
is a general problem as the subject understandably does not recall a wholly accurate start date for a medication they have been taking
for a number of years, or when a particular medical event occurred during childhood.
For current dates, there are several measures which can be put in place at the point of data collection to minimise the occurrence of incomplete data. This is especially the case with the increased use of electronic Case Report Forms (eCRFs) where the data is entered directly into the database by the subject or investigator and point of entry checks can be put in place to reduce the number of partial dates.
Where it has not been possible to eliminate the occurrence of partial dates, it is imperative that they are handled correctly to retain the integrity of the data. In the previous examples of longstanding medication use or childhood disease, it is unlikely to impact data integrity if a date is imputed which is a month away from the actual date; but it does still need to be handled correctly.
However, if a missing date is the end date of a prior medication which could potentially have a long half-life, it could impact on the interpretation of efficacy of the study drug. In this situation, making the most appropriate approximation for the missing information is more important.