| Literature DB >> 34753471 |
James E Harrison1, Stefanie Weber2, Robert Jakob3, Christopher G Chute4.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The International Classification of Diseases (ICD) has long been the main basis for comparability of statistics on causes of mortality and morbidity between places and over time. This paper provides an overview of the recently completed 11th revision of the ICD, focusing on the main innovations and their implications. MAIN TEXT: Changes in content reflect knowledge and perspectives on diseases and their causes that have emerged since ICD-10 was developed about 30 years ago. Changes in design and structure reflect the arrival of the networked digital era, for which ICD-11 has been prepared. ICD-11's information framework comprises a semantic knowledge base (the Foundation), a biomedical ontology linked to the Foundation and classifications derived from the Foundation. ICD-11 for Mortality and Morbidity Statistics (ICD-11-MMS) is the primary derived classification and the main successor to ICD-10. Innovations enabled by the new architecture include an online coding tool (replacing the index and providing additional functions), an application program interface to enable remote access to ICD-11 content and services, enhanced capability to capture and combine clinically relevant characteristics of cases and integrated support for multiple languages.Entities:
Keywords: Classification; Epidemiology; Informatics; International classification of diseases; Statistics; eHealth
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34753471 PMCID: PMC8577172 DOI: 10.1186/s12911-021-01534-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Med Inform Decis Mak ISSN: 1472-6947 Impact factor: 2.796
Fig. 1The ICD-11 Foundation and classifications based on it, including ICD-11 for mortality and morbidity statistics (ICD-11-MMS). Many classifications can be linearized from the rich Foundation. ICD-11-MMS (the main classification; blue) and the special tabulation list (a short set of categories for standard summary reports; red) share some concepts in the Foundation (purple). Concepts in the Foundation that are not included in ICD-11-MMS classification (grey) are, nevertheless, part of its index. Practicalities for use of ICD-11-MMS required that it should be constrained to a modest number of codable categories. Great extension of the expressive capabilities of ICD-11-MMS is provided by permitting code clusters to be built by combining stem codes and adding supplementary codes, chiefly extension codes (see Table 1)
The topics of extension codes in ICD-11-MMS, with examples
| Topics | Types and examples |
|---|---|
| Severity scale value | None, mild, moderate…. Grade 0/1/2… |
| Temporality | Course of the condition. Time in life. Pregnancy duration |
| Aetiology | Causation. Infectious agents. Allergens |
| Topology scale value | Relational. Distributional. Laterality. Regional |
| Anatomy and topography | Functional anatomy. Body regions. Partonomic view |
| Histopathology | Gliomas: benign, malignant, uncertain, in situ |
| Dimensions of injury | Types of fractures and whether open or into a joint |
| Dimensions of external causes | Type and part of place. Activity. Objects. Alcohol and drugs |
| Consciousness | Components of Glasgow Coma Scale. Pupil reaction |
| Substances | Medicaments (e.g., oxycodone). Chemicals (e.g., parathion) |
| Diagnosis code descriptors | Diagnosis timing/certainty/method of confirmation |
| Capacity or context | Condition of fetus/newborn reported in context of the mother |
| Health devices, equipment, and supplies | Medical devices, surgical instruments, dialysis supplies |
Fig. 2Examples of ICD-11-MMS code clusters
New chapters and sections in ICD-11-MMS
| Title | Reason for addition |
|---|---|
Chapter 3: Diseases of the blood or blood-forming organs Chapter 4: Diseases of the immune system | These two chapters were split from a single chapter in ICD-10, recognizing differences in etiology, manifestations, and care |
| Chapter 7: Sleep–wake disorders | This topic has become more prominent since the 10th revision. The chapter mostly includes new concepts with some concepts moved from other chapters in ICD-10 |
| Chapter 17: Conditions related to sexual health | This topic has become more prominent since the 10th revision. The chapter mostly includes concepts moved from other chapters in ICD-10, combined with some new concepts |
| Chapter 26: Traditional medicine conditions | This entirely new supplementary chapter in ICD-11 enables coding in terms of traditional medicine concepts, where required |
| Extension codes section | Codes in this section can be combined with a stem code to provide additional information |
| Functioning section | Some national modifications of ICD-10 added sections to allow patient functioning to be recorded. ICD-11 provides a supplementary section for functioning assessment, aligned with the WHO International Classification of Functioning |
Fig. 3Acute myocardial infarction in ICD-10 and ICD-11-MMS