Hospital readmission after noncardiac surgery: the role of major complications
- PMID: 24599504
- DOI: 10.1001/jamasurg.2014.4
Hospital readmission after noncardiac surgery: the role of major complications
Abstract
Importance: Hospital readmissions are believed to be an indicator of suboptimal care and are the focus of efforts by the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services to reduce health care cost and improve quality. Strategies to reduce surgical readmissions may be most effective if applied prospectively to patients who are at increased risk for readmission. Hospitals do not currently have the means to identify surgical patients who are at high risk for unplanned rehospitalizations.
Objective: To examine whether the American College of Surgeons National Surgical Quality Improvement Program (ACS NSQIP) predicted risk of major complications can be used to identify surgical patients at risk for rehospitalization.
Design, setting, and participants: Retrospective cohort study of 142,232 admissions in the ACS NSQIP registry for major noncardiac surgery.
Main outcomes and measures: The association between unplanned 30-day readmission and the ACS NSQIP predicted risk of major complications, controlling for severity of disease and surgical complexity.
Results: Of the 143,232 patients undergoing noncardiac surgery, 6.8% had unplanned 30-day readmissions. The rate of unplanned 30-day readmissions was 78.3% for patients with any postdischarge complication, compared with 12.3% for patients with only in-hospital complications and 4.8% for patients without any complications. Patients at very high risk for major complications (predicted risk of ACS NSQIP complication >10%) had 10-fold higher odds of readmission compared with patients at very low risk for complications (adjusted odds ratio = 10.35; 95% CI, 9.16-11.70), whereas patients at high (adjusted odds ratio = 6.57; 95% CI, 5.89-7.34) and moderate (adjusted odds ratio = 3.96; 95% CI, 3.57-4.39) risk of complications had 7- and 4-fold higher odds of readmission, respectively.
Conclusions and relevance: Unplanned readmissions in surgical patients are common in patients experiencing postoperative complications and can be predicted using the ACS NSQIP risk of major complications. Prospective identification of high-risk patients, using the NSQIP complication risk index, may allow hospitals to reduce unplanned rehospitalizations.
Comment in
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Forecasting hospital readmission after surgery: data and the hard-to-measure role of culture.JAMA Surg. 2014 May;149(5):445-6. doi: 10.1001/jamasurg.2014.10. JAMA Surg. 2014. PMID: 24599403 No abstract available.
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