National Library of Medicine, National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, Maryland, USA.
National Institute for Health and Disability Insurance, Brussels, Belgium.
J Am Med Inform Assoc. 2021 Dec 28;29(1):43-51. doi: 10.1093/jamia/ocab220.
To evaluate the International Classification of Health Interventions (ICHI) in the clinical and statistical use cases.
We identified 300 most-performed surgical procedures as represented by their display names in an electronic health record. For comparison with existing coding systems, we coded the procedures in ICHI, SNOMED CT, International Classification of Diseases (ICD)-10-PCS, and CCI (Canadian Classification of Health Interventions), using postcoordination (modification of existing codes by adding other codes), when applicable. Failure analysis was done for cases where full representation was not achieved. The ICHI encoding was further evaluated for adequacy to support statistical reporting by the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) and European Union (EU) categories of surgical procedures.
After deduplication, 229 distinct procedures remained. Without postcoordination, ICHI achieved full representation in 52.8%. A further 19.2% could be fully represented with postcoordination. SNOMED CT was the best performing overall, with 94.3% full representation without postcoordination, and 99.6% with postcoordination. Failure analysis showed that "method" and "target" constituted most of the missing information for ICHI encoding. For all OECD/EU surgical categories, ICHI coding was adequate to support statistical reporting. One OECD/EU category ("Hip replacement, secondary") required postcoordination for correct assignment.
In the clinical use case of capturing information in the electronic health record, ICHI was outperformed by the clinically oriented procedure coding systems (SNOMED CT and CCI), but was comparable to ICD-10-PCS. Postcoordination could be an effective and efficient means of improving coverage. ICHI is generally adequate for the collection of international statistics.
评估国际卫生干预分类(ICHI)在临床和统计应用中的情况。
我们从电子健康记录中确定了 300 种最常见的手术操作,以其显示名称表示。为了与现有编码系统进行比较,我们对 ICHI、SNOMED CT、国际疾病分类(ICD)-10-PCS 和 CCI(加拿大卫生干预分类)中的手术操作进行了编码,在适用的情况下采用后置协调(通过添加其他代码来修改现有代码)。对未完全表示的情况进行了故障分析。进一步评估了 ICHI 编码是否足以支持经济合作与发展组织(OECD)和欧盟(EU)手术操作类别的统计报告。
经去重后,有 229 种不同的手术操作。不采用后置协调,ICHI 的完全表示率为 52.8%。采用后置协调后,进一步提高了 19.2%的完全表示率。SNOMED CT 的总体表现最佳,无后置协调时的完全表示率为 94.3%,有后置协调时的完全表示率为 99.6%。故障分析表明,“方法”和“目标”构成了 ICHI 编码中缺失信息的主要部分。对于所有 OECD/EU 手术类别,ICHI 编码足以支持统计报告。一个 OECD/EU 类别(“髋关节置换术,二级”)需要后置协调才能正确分配。
在电子健康记录中捕获信息的临床应用中,ICHI 不如临床导向的手术编码系统(SNOMED CT 和 CCI)表现出色,但与 ICD-10-PCS 相当。后置协调可能是一种有效且高效的提高覆盖率的方法。ICHI 通常足以收集国际统计数据。