1Cerner Corporation, Vienna, VA. 2Department of Biostatistics, Kansas University Medical Center, Kansas City, MO. 3Critical Care Division, Department of Medicine, Baystate Medical Center, Springfield, MA. 4Tufts University School of Medicine, Boston, MA. 5Department of Anesthesiology and Critical Care Medicine, George Washington University, Washington, DC.
Crit Care Med. 2015 Feb;43(2):261-9. doi: 10.1097/CCM.0000000000000694.
To compare ICU performance using standardized mortality ratios generated by the Acute Physiology and Chronic Health Evaluation IVa and a National Quality Forum-endorsed methodology and examine potential reasons for model-based standardized mortality ratio differences.
Retrospective analysis of day 1 hospital mortality predictions at the ICU level using Acute Physiology and Chronic Health Evaluation IVa and National Quality Forum models on the same patient cohort.
Forty-seven ICUs at 36 U.S. hospitals from January 2008 to May 2013.
Eighty-nine thousand three hundred fifty-three consecutive unselected ICU admissions.
None.
We assessed standardized mortality ratios for each ICU using data for patients eligible for Acute Physiology and Chronic Health Evaluation IVa and National Quality Forum predictions in order to compare unit-level model performance, differences in ICU rankings, and how case-mix adjustment might explain standardized mortality ratio differences. Hospital mortality was 11.5%. Overall standardized mortality ratio was 0.89 using Acute Physiology and Chronic Health Evaluation IVa and 1.07 using National Quality Forum, the latter having a widely dispersed and multimodal standardized mortality ratio distribution. Model exclusion criteria eliminated mortality predictions for 10.6% of patients for Acute Physiology and Chronic Health Evaluation IVa and 27.9% for National Quality Forum. The two models agreed on the significance and direction of standardized mortality ratio only 45% of the time. Four ICUs had standardized mortality ratios significantly less than 1.0 using Acute Physiology and Chronic Health Evaluation IVa, but significantly greater than 1.0 using National Quality Forum. Two ICUs had standardized mortality ratios exceeding 1.75 using National Quality Forum, but nonsignificant performance using Acute Physiology and Chronic Health Evaluation IVa. Stratification by patient and institutional characteristics indicated that units caring for more severely ill patients and those with a higher percentage of patients on mechanical ventilation had the most discordant standardized mortality ratios between the two predictive models.
Acute Physiology and Chronic Health Evaluation IVa and National Quality Forum models yield different ICU performance assessments due to differences in case-mix adjustment. Given the growing role of outcomes in driving prospective payment patient referral and public reporting, performance should be assessed by models with fewer exclusions, superior accuracy, and better case-mix adjustment.
比较使用急性生理学与慢性健康评估第四版(Acute Physiology and Chronic Health Evaluation IVa)和国家质量论坛认可的方法生成的标准化死亡率比来评估 ICU 表现,并研究模型标准化死亡率比差异的潜在原因。
对同一患者队列在 ICU 水平上使用急性生理学与慢性健康评估第四版和国家质量论坛模型进行第 1 天医院死亡率预测的回顾性分析。
2008 年 1 月至 2013 年 5 月,美国 36 家医院的 47 个 ICU。
连续 89353 例未经选择的 ICU 入住患者。
无。
我们评估了每个 ICU 的标准化死亡率比,使用符合急性生理学与慢性健康评估第四版和国家质量论坛预测标准的患者数据,以比较单位水平的模型性能、ICU 排名差异以及病例组合调整如何解释标准化死亡率比差异。医院死亡率为 11.5%。整体标准化死亡率为 0.89(使用急性生理学与慢性健康评估第四版)和 1.07(使用国家质量论坛),后者的标准化死亡率比分布范围广泛且呈多峰。急性生理学与慢性健康评估第四版的排除标准排除了 10.6%的患者的死亡率预测,而国家质量论坛则排除了 27.9%的患者。两种模型仅在 45%的时间内对标准化死亡率比的意义和方向达成一致。有 4 个 ICU 使用急性生理学与慢性健康评估第四版的标准化死亡率比显著低于 1.0,但使用国家质量论坛的标准化死亡率比显著高于 1.0。有 2 个 ICU 使用国家质量论坛的标准化死亡率比超过 1.75,但使用急性生理学与慢性健康评估第四版时则无显著差异。根据患者和机构特征进行分层表明,照顾病情更严重的患者和机械通气患者比例较高的单位,两种预测模型之间的标准化死亡率比差异最大。
由于病例组合调整的差异,急性生理学与慢性健康评估第四版和国家质量论坛模型产生了不同的 ICU 表现评估。鉴于结果在推动前瞻性支付患者转诊和公共报告中的作用越来越大,应使用排除率更低、准确性更高、病例组合调整更好的模型来评估表现。