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HomeHospital MedicineSepsis accounts for highest number of hospitalisation re-admissions

Sepsis accounts for highest number of hospitalisation re-admissions

Sepsis hospitalisations account for a higher proportion of unplanned 30-day re-admissions than hospitalisations for heart attack, heart failure, COPD, and pneumonia in the US, according to a study being released to coincide with its presentation at the Society of Critical Care Medicine’s 46th Critical Care Congress.

The Centres for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) uses 30-day re-admission rates to measure quality of care and guide pay-for-performance. The CMS tracks re-admissions following hospitalisations for acute myocardial infarction (AMI; heart attack), heart failure, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD), and pneumonia because hospitalisations for these conditions are frequent and account for a large proportion of re-admissions. The proportion and cost of unplanned re-admissions following sepsis hospitalisations are not known.

Dr Sachin Yende, of the VA Pittsburgh Healthcare System, and colleagues analysed data from the 2013 Nationwide Re-admissions Database, which aggregates acute care hospitalisations from 21 states and represents inpatient use for 49% of the US population. Among 14,325,172 hospitalisations, the researchers identified 1,187,697 index admissions for medical reasons that were associated with an unplanned 30-day re-admission. Of those, 12.2% had a diagnosis of sepsis; 6.7%, heart failure; 5%, pneumonia; 4.6%, COPD; and 1.3%, AMI.

The average length of stay for unplanned re-admissions following sepsis hospitalization was longer than re-admissions following AMI, heart failure, COPD, and pneumonia. The estimated average cost per re-admission was highest for sepsis compared with the other diagnoses.

“Adding sepsis to the Hospital Re-admission Reduction Programme may lead to development of new interventions to reduce unplanned re-admissions and associated costs,” the authors write.

Abstract
Introduction: The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) uses 30-day readmission rates to measure quality of care and guide pay-for-performance. The CMS tracks readmissions following index hospitalizations for acute myocardial infarction (AMI), heart failure, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD), and pneumonia because hospitalizations for these conditions are frequent and account for a large proportion of readmissions.1 The proportion and cost of unplanned readmissions following sepsis hospitalizations are not known. We hypothesized that sepsis hospitalizations account for a higher proportion of unplanned 30-day readmissions than hospitalizations for AMI, heart failure, COPD, and pneumonia in the United States.
Methods: We analyzed data from the 2013 Nationwide Readmissions Database, which aggregates acute care hospitalizations from 21 states and represents inpatient use for 49% of the US population.2 This study was deemed exempt by the University of Pittsburgh institutional review board. For adults aged 18 years or older, we identified index admissions for medical reasons (using diagnosis-related group codes) that were followed by an unplanned hospital readmission within 30 days of discharge. We excluded index admissions if patients were not discharged alive, left against medical advice, were transferred to another acute care hospital, or occurred during December (because data for 30-day readmissions were not available). Patients with more than 1 admission-readmission episode could be included.
For these patients, we determined the weighted proportions of index admissions due to sepsis, AMI, COPD, heart failure, and pneumonia. Because patients hospitalized for AMI, heart failure, COPD, and pneumonia may have sepsis, we calculated the proportion of sepsis cases that overlapped with other conditions. We conducted primary analyses using International Classification of Diseases, Ninth Revision, Clinical Modification codes in 10 discharge diagnoses fields to identify sepsis and used CMS methods to identify the remaining 4 conditions, which use only the primary discharge diagnosis field.3,4 We conducted sensitivity analyses using stringent criteria used by CMS for sepsis and extended the CMS criteria to identify the remaining 4 conditions to 10 discharge diagnoses fields. We estimated costs for readmissions using previous approaches.5
We performed pairwise comparisons of proportions of index admissions, length of stay, and cost for each of the 5 conditions using multinomial logistic, negative binomial, and γ regression, respectively. For all analyses, robust standard errors were used, and 2-sided P values less than .005 were considered significant to account for multiple comparisons. All statistical analyses were performed using SAS (SAS Institute), version 9.3, and Stata (StataCorp), version 13.1.
Results: Among 14 325 172 hospitalizations, we identified 1 187 697 index admissions for medical reasons that were associated with an unplanned 30-day readmission. Of those, 147 084 (12.2%; 95% CI, 11.9%-12.4%) had a diagnosis of sepsis, 15 001 (1.3%; 95% CI, 1.2%-1.3%) AMI, 79 480 (6.7%; 95% CI, 6.5%-6.8%) heart failure, 54 396 (4.6%; 95% CI, 4.5%-4.8%) COPD, and 59 378 (5.0%; 95% CI, 5.0%-5.3%) pneumonia. Among sepsis index admissions, 1061 (0.7%) also had diagnostic codes that met CMS criteria for AMI, 5063 (3.4%) heart failure, 4829 (3.3%) COPD, and 11 093 (7.5%) pneumonia.
The mean length of stay for unplanned readmissions following sepsis hospitalization was longer than readmissions following AMI, heart failure, COPD, and pneumonia (Table). The estimated mean cost per readmission was highest for sepsis compared with the other diagnoses ($10 070 [95% CI, $10 021-$10 119] for sepsis, $8417 [95% CI, $8355-$8480] for COPD, $9051 [95% CI, $8990-$9113] for heart failure, $9424 [95% CI, $9279-$9571] for AMI, and $9533 [95% CI, $9466-$9600] for pneumonia; P < .005 for all pairwise comparisons). Sepsis remained a leading cause of readmissions and cost in sensitivity analyses using the CMS sepsis criteria and extending the CMS criteria for AMI, heart failure, COPD, and pneumonia to 10 discharge diagnoses fields (Table).
Discussion: Among medical conditions, sepsis is a leading cause of readmissions and associated costs. Adding sepsis to the Hospital Readmission Reduction Program may lead to development of new interventions to reduce unplanned readmissions and associated costs. This study is limited in that the National Readmissions Database uses state specific identifiers that cannot follow-up patients across states, which may underestimate readmission rates. In addition, readmission rates and cost estimates may vary based on different sepsis definitions.

Authors
Florian B Mayr; Victor B Talisa; Vikram Balakumar; Chung-Chou H Chang; Michael Fine; Sachin Yende

[link url="http://media.jamanetwork.com/news-item/sepsis-a-leading-cause-of-hospital-readmission/"]JAMA material[/link]
[link url="http://jamanetwork.com/journals/jama/fullarticle/2598785"]JAMA research letter[/link]

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