Stephanie L LaBedz1, Jerry A Krishnan1,2. 1. Division of Pulmonary, Critical Care, Sleep, and Allergy University of Illinois at Chicago Chicago, Illinois and. 2. Population Health Sciences Program University of Illinois Hospital and Health Science System Chicago, Illinois.
In 2008, a report from the U.S. Medicare Payment Advisory
Commission recommended incentives for hospitals to improve hospital-to-home care
transitions by publicly reporting readmission rates and reducing payments to hospitals
with relatively high readmission rates (1). On
March 23, 2010, the 111th Congress of the United States passed the Patient Protection
and Affordable Care Act (often shortened to the “Affordable Care Act”)
(2), which included provisions to establish
the Hospital Readmissions Reduction Program (HRRP) within the Centers for Medicare and
Medicaid Services (CMS). The HRRP was designed to reduce healthcare costs among Medicare
fee-for-service beneficiaries 65 years or older while simultaneously improving the
quality of care by implementing financial penalties for hospitals with greater than
expected 30-day hospital readmissions (3). In
other words, HRRP is an effort to promote high-value care by reducing healthcare costs
and utilization.Under the HRRP, hospitals with higher than expected readmissions of patients recently
hospitalized for heart failure, pneumonia, or myocardial infarction received reduced
Medicare reimbursements starting in October 2012. Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease
(COPD) exacerbations were added to the list of HRRP penalty-sensitive conditions in
October 2014. Patients, front-line clinicians, and administrators have raised concerns
about the appropriateness of 30-day readmissions as a quality measure for hospitals
because hospital-based care is only one of many factors that contribute to posthospital
outcomes (4). For example, limited access to
high-quality posthospital care and patients’ socioeconomic resources (e.g.,
social support, stable housing, transportation, and food) also contribute to
readmissions (5). In addition, the published
literature about how hospitals can safely prevent hospital readmissions is limited and
contradictory, the International Classification of Diseases codes used for
administrative purposes (e.g., reimbursement) may not be sufficiently sensitive nor
specific to reliably identify hospitalizations for COPD exacerbations, and, perhaps most
importantly, it is unclear whether decreasing readmissions after a COPD exacerbation
leads to excess postdischarge mortality (6).It is in this context that the study in this issue of the Journal by
Puebla Neira and colleagues (pp. 437–446) offers important
new information (7). Puebla Neira and colleagues
conducted a retrospective cohort study of Medicare fee-for-service beneficiaries age 65
years or older using administrative billing codes from over 4.5 million COPD
hospitalizations from 2006 to 2017. In this population, they report an all-cause
in-hospital mortality rate of 3% and an all-cause 30-day posthospital mortality rate of
5.3%. The authors report the mean hospital-level risks of readmission and mortality
after hospital discharge in the following three periods: the
“preannouncement” period before the Affordable Care Act (December
2006–March 2010), the “announcement” period when the HRRP was
announced (April 2010 to August 2014), and the “implementation” period
when hospitalization for COPD exacerbation was added as a penalty-sensitive HRRP
condition (October 2014–November 2017).Findings from the study by Puebla Neira and colleagues (see Table 3 and
Figure 3 in Reference 7) suggest that 30-day
all-cause hospital readmission rates dropped from 20.5% to 18.7% over the 11-year period
from 2006 to 2017. Nearly all of the improvement in 30-day hospital readmissions among
patients with an index hospitalization for a COPD exacerbation occurred before the
inclusion of COPD in HRRP in October 2014, presumably because changes in transitional
care services from hospital-to-home for patients hospitalized for heart failure,
pneumonia, or myocardial infarction also benefited patients hospitalized for COPD
exacerbations. Importantly, the 30-day postdischarge mortality rates from 2006 to 2017
form a U-shaped curve, in which they decrease from 6.9% (December 2006–July 2008
in the preannouncement period) to 6.6% (April 2010–November 2011 in the
announcement period) but then increase to 7.3% (May 2016–November 2017 in the
implementation period).The report by Puebla Neira and colleagues offers new evidence to refute the hypothesis
that efforts to reduce 30-day readmissions will also improve other clinically meaningful
30-day postdischarge outcomes and builds on the results of a
previous study that demonstrated an increase in 30-day mortality after hospital
admission for COPD after it became an HRRP penalty-sensitive condition
(8). Others have reported that the
implementation of the HRRP was associated with a significant increase in 30-day
postdischarge mortality in patients hospitalized for heart failure or pneumonia;
however, this pattern was not observed in patients hospitalized for myocardial
infarction (9). Taken together, we believe it is
now time for CMS to reexamine the HRRP’s focus on reducing readmissions among
patients hospitalized for COPD exacerbations as a means of promoting value-based U.S.
healthcare. Reductions in readmissions after the expansion of HRRP to include
hospitalizations for COPD have now been shown to be associated with an increase in
30-day all-cause mortality after hospital admission and 30-day all-cause mortality after
hospital discharge.Many questions remain. First, the authors acknowledge that they were not able to fully
exclude patients admitted from hospice from the analyses; the extent to which such
patients contribute to an overestimation of the number of postdischarge deaths is
unclear. Second, the study was not designed to understand the factors that contribute to
the observed tradeoff between hospital readmissions and postdischarge mortality. It is
therefore unclear which, if any, aspects of hospital-based or posthospital transitional
care services reduce readmissions while also increasing the risk of postdischarge death.
Also, the analyses focused on the average risk of readmissions and postdischarge deaths
across thousands of hospitals; it is unclear whether the inverse relationship between
the risk of readmission and postdischarge mortality is consistent across different
hospital or patient characteristics.Patients recently hospitalized for a COPD exacerbation, their caregivers, and clinicians
are likely to choose a readmission if it can save a life. The CMS HRRP should be
redesigned to support such decisions.
Authors: Rishi K Wadhera; Karen E Joynt Maddox; Jason H Wasfy; Sebastien Haneuse; Changyu Shen; Robert W Yeh Journal: JAMA Date: 2018-12-25 Impact factor: 56.272
Authors: Jerry A Krishnan; Hélène A Gussin; Valentin Prieto-Centurion; Jamie L Sullivan; Farhan Zaidi; Byron M Thomashow Journal: Chronic Obstr Pulm Dis Date: 2015
Authors: Daniel A Puebla Neira; En Shuo Hsu; Yong-Fang Kuo; Kenneth J Ottenbacher; Gulshan Sharma Journal: Am J Respir Crit Care Med Date: 2021-02-15 Impact factor: 21.405