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Clinical Preventability of 30‐Day Readmission After Percutaneous Coronary Intervention
Author(s) -
Wasfy Jason H.,
Strom Jordan B.,
Waldo Stephen W.,
O'Brien Cashel,
Wimmer Neil J.,
Zai Adrian H.,
Luttrell Jennifer,
Spertus John A.,
Kennedy Kevin F.,
Normand SharonLise T.,
Mauri Laura,
Yeh Robert W.
Publication year - 2014
Publication title -
journal of the american heart association
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.494
H-Index - 85
ISSN - 2047-9980
DOI - 10.1161/jaha.114.001290
Subject(s) - medicine , conventional pci , percutaneous coronary intervention , emergency medicine , hospital readmission , medical record , logistic regression , intensive care medicine , myocardial infarction
Background Early readmission after PCI is an important contributor to healthcare expenditures and a target for performance measurement. The extent to which 30‐day readmissions after PCI are preventable is unknown yet essential to minimizing their occurrence. Methods and Results PCI patients readmitted to hospital at which PCI was performed within 30 days of discharge at the Massachusetts General Hospital and Brigham and Women's Hospital were identified, and their medical records were independently reviewed by 2 physicians. Each reviewer used an ordinal scale (0, not; 1, possibly; 2, probably; and 3, definitely preventable) to rate clinical preventability, and a total sum score ≥2 was considered preventable. Characteristics of preventable and unpreventable readmissions were compared, and predictors of clinical preventability were assessed by using multivariate logistic regression. Of 9288 PCI s performed, 9081 (97.8%) patients survived to initial hospital discharge and 1007 (11.1%) were readmitted to the index hospital within 30 days. After excluding repeat readmissions, 893 readmissions were reviewed. Fair agreement between physician reviewers was observed (weighted κ statistic 0.44 [95% CI 0.39 to 0.49]). After aggregation of scores, 380 (42.6%) readmissions were deemed preventable and 513 (57.4%) were deemed not preventable. Common causes of preventable readmissions included staged PCI without new symptoms (14.7%), vascular/bleeding complications of PCI (10.0%), and congestive heart failure (9.7%). Conclusions Nearly half of 30‐day readmissions after PCI may have been prevented by changes in clinical decision‐making. Focusing on these readmissions may reduce readmission rates.

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