by Walkey, Allan
J.; Shieh, Meng-Shiou; Liu, Vincent X.; Lindenauer, Peter K.
Objectives: Sepsis care
is becoming a more common target for hospital performance measurement, but few
studies have evaluated the acceptability of sepsis or septic shock mortality as
a potential performance measure. In the absence of a gold standard to identify
septic shock in claims data, we assessed agreement and stability of hospital
mortality performance under different case definitions. Design: Retrospective
cohort study. Setting: U.S. acute care hospitals. Patients: Hospitalized with
septic shock at admission, identified by either implicit diagnosis criteria
(charges for antibiotics, cultures, and vasopressors) or by explicit
International Classification of Diseases, 9th revision, codes. Interventions:
None. Measurements and Main Results: We used hierarchical logistic regression
models to determine hospital risk–standardized mortality rates and hospital
performance outliers. We assessed agreement in hospital mortality rankings when
septic shock cases were identified by either explicit International
Classification of Diseases, 9th revision, codes or implicit diagnosis criteria.
Kappa statistics and intraclass correlation coefficients were used to assess agreement
in hospital risk–standardized mortality and hospital outlier status,
respectively. Fifty-six thousand six-hundred seventy-three patients in 308
hospitals fulfilled at least one case definition for septic shock, whereas
19,136 (33.8%) met both the explicit International Classification of Diseases,
9th revision, and implicit septic shock definition. Hospitals varied widely in
risk-standardized septic shock mortality (interquartile range of implicit
diagnosis mortality: 25.4–33.5%; International Classification of Diseases, 9th
revision, diagnosis: 30.2–38.0%). The median absolute difference in hospital
ranking between septic shock cohorts defined by International Classification of
Diseases, 9th revision, versus implicit criteria was 37 places (interquartile
range, 16–70), with an intraclass correlation coefficient of 0.72, p value of
less than 0.001; agreement between case definitions for identification of
outlier hospitals was moderate (kappa, 0.44 [95% CI, 0.30–0.58]). Conclusions:
Risk-standardized septic shock mortality rates varied considerably between
hospitals, suggesting that septic shock is an important performance target.
However, efforts to profile hospital performance were sensitive to septic shock
case definitions, suggesting that septic shock mortality is not currently ready
for widespread use as a hospital quality measure.
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