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. 2015 Jul;104(7):555-65.
doi: 10.1007/s00392-015-0818-3. Epub 2015 Jan 28.

Coronary procedures in German hospitals: a detailed analysis for specific patient clusters

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Coronary procedures in German hospitals: a detailed analysis for specific patient clusters

Kurt Bestehorn et al. Clin Res Cardiol. 2015 Jul.

Abstract

Objectives: Evaluation of the classification of the patients with coronary procedures [CP: coronary angiography (CA) and/or percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI)] in Germany to provide valid data as a basis for the evaluation of resource planning and comparison of results from other countries.

Background: In the case of CP, most data are restricted to procedures related to acute coronary syndrome (ACS), either STEMI or NSTEMI, and does not cover the whole range of coronary angiographies and therapeutic procedures. To contribute to the clarification of this situation, our analysis was performed.

Methods: The data of all patients with CP documented according to § 137 German Social Security Code V (SGB V) by hospitals registered under the requirements of § 108 SGB V were analyzed. By cluster analysis, the most important predictors for four short-term clinical outcomes (intra-procedural and post-procedural events, death, length of hospital stay) were identified. Differences were analyzed on a national, federal state and interstate level.

Results: In 2012, 764,233 CP were performed in 733,337 patients (64.7 % males) in 890 hospitals. In 88.2 % of all patients, a cardiac disease was detected; in 11.3 %, it was excluded. 5 clusters were identified which were based on the following parameters: ACS, invasive coronary procedure, cardiac disease (i.e., hypertensive cardiac disease, cardiomyopathy, aortic aneurysm, cardiac valve disease), exclusion of CHD. There were significant differences between the five patient clusters: percentages of patients with diabetes, renal insufficiency and CHF varied between 14.1 and 32.9 %, 9.5 and 31.6 %, and 7.0 and 16.9 %, respectively; average duration of hospitalization and death rates varied between 5.5 (without ACS) and 8 days (ACS) and 0.3 and 4.5 %, respectively. The distribution of patient clusters varied significantly between the German federal states as well as within a federal state.

Conclusions: Five patient clusters with CP showed significantly differing profiles of risk, outcome and resource consumption as well as a regional distribution. This has to be considered for comparisons between hospitals as well as on a regional and international level and hospital planning.

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