Literature DB >> 28859926

Impact of Accurate 30-Day Status on Operative Mortality: Wanted Dead or Alive, Not Unknown.

W Steves Ring1, James R Edgerton2, Morley Herbert3, Syma Prince4, Cathy Knoff5, Kristin M Jenkins5, Michael E Jessen6, Baron L Hamman7.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Risk-adjusted operative mortality is the most important quality metric in cardiac surgery for determining The Society of Thoracic Surgeons (STS) Composite Score for star ratings. Accurate 30-day status is required to determine STS operative mortality. The goal of this study was to determine the effect of unknown or missing 30-day status on risk-adjusted operative mortality in a regional STS Adult Cardiac Surgery Database cooperative and demonstrate the ability to correct these deficiencies by matching with an administrative database.
METHODS: STS Adult Cardiac Surgery Database data were submitted by 27 hospitals from five hospital systems to the Texas Quality Initiative (TQI), a regional quality collaborative. TQI data were matched with a regional hospital claims database to resolve unknown 30-day status. The risk-adjusted operative mortality observed-to-expected (O/E) ratio was determined before and after matching to determine the effect of unknown status on the operative mortality O/E.
RESULTS: TQI found an excessive (22%) unknown 30-day status for STS isolated coronary artery bypass grafting cases. Matching the TQI data to the administrative claims database reduced the unknowns to 7%. The STS process of imputing unknown 30-day status as alive underestimates the true operative mortality O/E (1.27 before vs 1.30 after match), while excluding unknowns overestimates the operative mortality O/E (1.57 before vs 1.37 after match) for isolated coronary artery bypass grafting.
CONCLUSIONS: The current STS algorithm of imputing unknown 30-day status as alive and a strategy of excluding cases with unknown 30-day status both result in erroneous calculation of operative mortality and operative mortality O/E. However, external validation by matching with an administrative database can improve the accuracy of clinical databases such as the STS Adult Cardiac Surgery Database.
Copyright © 2017 The Society of Thoracic Surgeons. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

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Year:  2017        PMID: 28859926     DOI: 10.1016/j.athoracsur.2017.05.046

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Ann Thorac Surg        ISSN: 0003-4975            Impact factor:   4.330


  3 in total

1.  Society of Thoracic Surgeons Risk Score and EuroSCORE-2 Appropriately Assess 30-Day Postoperative Mortality in the STICH Trial and a Contemporary Cohort of Patients With Left Ventricular Dysfunction Undergoing Surgical Revascularization.

Authors:  Nadia Bouabdallaoui; Susanna R Stevens; Torsten Doenst; Mark C Petrie; Nawwar Al-Attar; Imtiaz S Ali; Andrew P Ambrosy; Anna K Barton; Raymond Cartier; Alexander Cherniavsky; Pierre Demondion; Patrice Desvigne-Nickens; Robert R Favaloro; Sinisa Gradinac; Petra Heinisch; Anil Jain; Marek Jasinski; Jerome Jouan; Renato A K Kalil; Lorenzo Menicanti; Robert E Michler; Vivek Rao; Peter K Smith; Marian Zembala; Eric J Velazquez; Hussein R Al-Khalidi; Jean L Rouleau
Journal:  Circ Heart Fail       Date:  2018-11       Impact factor: 8.790

2.  High-quality cardiac surgery through teamwork.

Authors:  Baron L Hamman; A Carl Henry; Robert F Hebeler; Aldo E Rafael; Gonzalo V Gonzalez-Stawinski; Daniel H Enter; Aaron Mercado-Reza; Bobbi Leeper; Charles S Roberts
Journal:  Proc (Bayl Univ Med Cent)       Date:  2020-09-14

3.  Operative mortality in adult cardiac surgery: is the currently utilized definition justified?

Authors:  Patrick G Chan; Laura Seese; Edgar Aranda-Michel; Ibrahim Sultan; Thomas G Gleason; Yisi Wang; Floyd Thoma; Arman Kilic
Journal:  J Thorac Dis       Date:  2021-10       Impact factor: 2.895

  3 in total

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