Evaluation of complication rates after coronary artery bypass surgery using administrative data
Ghali, William A. ; Hall, Ruth E. ; Ash, Arlene S. ; Rosen, Amy K. ; Moskowitz, Mark A.
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UMass Chan Affiliations
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Keywords
Analysis of Variance
Cohort Studies
Coronary Artery Bypass
Diagnosis-Related Groups
Female
*Hospital Mortality
Humans
Logistic Models
Male
Massachusetts
Middle Aged
Multivariate Analysis
Odds Ratio
Risk Assessment
Survival Analysis
Treatment Outcome
Biostatistics
Epidemiology
Health Services Research
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Abstract
Our objectives were (1) to determine if studying hospital complication rates after coronary artery bypass graft (CABG) surgery provides information not available when only mortality is studied, and (2) to reexplore the utility of ICD-9-CM administrative data for CABG outcomes assessment. Using data from Massachusetts, we identified CABG cohorts from 1990 and 1992 to respectively develop and validate multivariate risk adjustment models predicting in-hospital mortality and complications. The resulting models had good discrimination and calibration. In 1992, adjusted hospital complication rates ranged widely from 13.0% to 57.6%, while mortality rates ranged from 1.4% to 6.1%. Hospitals with high complication rates tended to have high mortality (r = 0.74, p = 0.006), but 2 of the 12 hospitals studied ranked quite differently when judged by complications rather than mortality. We conclude that (1) complications after CABG occur frequently and may provide information about hospital quality beyond that obtained from hospital mortality rates, and that (2) administrative data continue to be a promising resource for outcomes research.
Source
Methods Inf Med. 1998 Jun;37(2):192-200. Link to article on publisher's site