Development and validation of risk-adjusted quality indicators for the long-term outcome of acute sepsis care in German hospitals based on health claims data

Zugehörigkeit
Institute of Medical Statistics, Computer and Data Sciences, Jena University Hospital ,Jena ,Germany
Wedekind, Lisa;
GND
1122569513
ORCID
0000-0002-1104-3191
Zugehörigkeit
Institute for Infectious Diseases and Infection Control, Jena University Hospital ,Jena ,Germany
Fleischmann-Struzek, Carolin;
GND
1034373129
ORCID
0000-0002-2908-205X
Zugehörigkeit
Institute for Infectious Diseases and Infection Control, Jena University Hospital ,Jena ,Germany
Rose, Norman;
Zugehörigkeit
Federal Association of the Local Health Care Funds, Research Institute of the Local Health Care Funds (WIdO) ,Berlin ,Germany
Spoden, Melissa;
Zugehörigkeit
Federal Association of the Local Health Care Funds, Research Institute of the Local Health Care Funds (WIdO) ,Berlin ,Germany
Günster, Christian;
GND
138812187
Zugehörigkeit
Institute of Medical Statistics, Computer and Data Sciences, Jena University Hospital ,Jena ,Germany
Schlattmann, Peter;
GND
13575710X
Zugehörigkeit
Institute of Medical Statistics, Computer and Data Sciences, Jena University Hospital ,Jena ,Germany
Scherag, André;
Zugehörigkeit
Department of Anaesthesiology and Operative Intensive Care Medicine (CCM, CVK), Charité Universitätsmedizin Berlin, Corporate Member of Freie Universität Berlin, Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin ,Berlin ,Germany
Reinhart, Konrad;
GND
1156202949
ORCID
0000-0002-1568-8202
Zugehörigkeit
Department of Anesthesiology and Intensive Care Medicine, Jena University Hospital ,Jena ,Germany
Schwarzkopf, Daniel

Background Methods for assessing long-term outcome quality of acute care for sepsis are lacking. We investigated a method for measuring long-term outcome quality based on health claims data in Germany. Materials and methods Analyses were based on data of the largest German health insurer, covering 32% of the population. Cases (aged 15 years and older) with ICD-10-codes for severe sepsis or septic shock according to sepsis-1-definitions hospitalized in 2014 were included. Short-term outcome was assessed by 90-day mortality; long-term outcome was assessed by a composite endpoint defined by 1-year mortality or increased dependency on chronic care. Risk factors were identified by logistic regressions with backward selection. Hierarchical generalized linear models were used to correct for clustering of cases in hospitals. Predictive validity of the models was assessed by internal validation using bootstrap-sampling. Risk-standardized mortality rates (RSMR) were calculated with and without reliability adjustment and their univariate and bivariate distributions were described. Results Among 35,552 included patients, 53.2% died within 90 days after admission; 39.8% of 90-day survivors died within the first year or had an increased dependency on chronic care. Both risk-models showed a sufficient predictive validity regarding discrimination [ AUC = 0.748 (95% CI: 0.742; 0.752) for 90-day mortality; AUC = 0.675 (95% CI: 0.665; 0.685) for the 1-year composite outcome, respectively], calibration (Brier Score of 0.203 and 0.220; calibration slope of 1.094 and 0.978), and explained variance ( R 2 = 0.242 and R 2 = 0.111). Because of a small case-volume per hospital, applying reliability adjustment to the RSMR led to a great decrease in variability across hospitals [from median (1st quartile, 3rd quartile) 54.2% (44.3%, 65.5%) to 53.2% (50.7%, 55.9%) for 90-day mortality; from 39.2% (27.8%, 51.1%) to 39.9% (39.5%, 40.4%) for the 1-year composite endpoint]. There was no substantial correlation between the two endpoints at hospital level (observed rates: ρ = 0, p = 0.99; RSMR: ρ = 0.017, p = 0.56; reliability-adjusted RSMR: ρ = 0.067; p = 0.026). Conclusion Quality assurance and epidemiological surveillance of sepsis care should include indicators of long-term mortality and morbidity. Claims-based risk-adjustment models for quality indicators of acute sepsis care showed satisfactory predictive validity. To increase reliability of measurement, data sources should cover the full population and hospitals need to improve ICD-10-coding of sepsis.

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Rechteinhaber: Copyright © 2023 Wedekind, Fleischmann-Struzek, Rose, Spoden, Günster, Schlattmann, Scherag, Reinhart and Schwarzkopf.

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