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. 2021 Oct 12;28(11):2404-2411.
doi: 10.1093/jamia/ocab156.

Feasibility of replacing the ICD-10-CM with the ICD-11 for morbidity coding: A content analysis

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Feasibility of replacing the ICD-10-CM with the ICD-11 for morbidity coding: A content analysis

Kin Wah Fung et al. J Am Med Inform Assoc. .

Abstract

Objective: The study sought to assess the feasibility of replacing the International Classification of Diseases-Tenth Revision-Clinical Modification (ICD-10-CM) with the International Classification of Diseases-11th Revision (ICD-11) for morbidity coding based on content analysis.

Materials and methods: The most frequently used ICD-10-CM codes from each chapter covering 60% of patients were identified from Medicare claims and hospital data. Each ICD-10-CM code was recoded in the ICD-11, using postcoordination (combination of codes) if necessary. Recoding was performed by 2 terminologists independently. Failure analysis was done for cases where full representation was not achieved even with postcoordination. After recoding, the coding guidance (inclusions, exclusions, and index) of the ICD-10-CM and ICD-11 codes were reviewed for conflict.

Results: Overall, 23.5% of 943 codes could be fully represented by the ICD-11 without postcoordination. Postcoordination is the potential game changer. It supports the full representation of 8.6% of 943 codes. Moreover, with the addition of only 9 extension codes, postcoordination supports the full representation of 35.2% of 943 codes. Coding guidance review identified potential conflicts in 10% of codes, but mostly not affecting recoding. The majority of the conflicts resulted from differences in granularity and default coding assumptions between the ICD-11 and ICD-10-CM.

Conclusions: With some minor enhancements to postcoordination, the ICD-11 can fully represent almost 60% of the most frequently used ICD-10-CM codes. Even without postcoordination, 23.5% full representation is comparable to the 24.3% of ICD-9-CM codes with exact match in the ICD-10-CM, so migrating from the ICD-10-CM to the ICD-11 is not necessarily more disruptive than from the International Classification of Diseases-Ninth Revision-Clinical Modification to the ICD-10-CM. Therefore, the ICD-11 (without a CM) should be considered as a candidate to replace the ICD-10-CM for morbidity coding.

Keywords: ICD-10; ICD-10-CM; ICD-11; controlled medical vocabularies; medical terminologies.

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Figures

Figure 1.
Figure 1.
Agreement of International Classification of Diseases–11th Revision (ICD-11) coding between the 2 terminologists. ICD-10-CM: International Classification of Diseases–Tenth Revision–Clinical Modification; PC: postcoordination.

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