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35. Missed and Unrecorded Drug Use Among Infective Endocarditis Cases Is Associated with Underestimated Burden of Disease and Fragmented Care: Evidence from Six States

BACKGROUND: Studies using national administrative data suggest that hospitalizations for drug use-associated infective endocarditis (DUA-IE) have increased over the last ten years. However, drug use as a contributing factor to IE hospitalizations is often missed or not included in coding documentati...

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Autores principales: Christine, Paul, Usher, Michael, Pham, Cuong, Kelly, Ryan, Winkelman, Tyler
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Oxford University Press 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7776080/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/ofid/ofaa417.034
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author Christine, Paul
Usher, Michael
Pham, Cuong
Kelly, Ryan
Winkelman, Tyler
author_facet Christine, Paul
Usher, Michael
Pham, Cuong
Kelly, Ryan
Winkelman, Tyler
author_sort Christine, Paul
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Studies using national administrative data suggest that hospitalizations for drug use-associated infective endocarditis (DUA-IE) have increased over the last ten years. However, drug use as a contributing factor to IE hospitalizations is often missed or not included in coding documentation, resulting in undercount of DUA-IE. We assessed whether missed drug use during IE hospitalizations was associated with higher levels of fragmented care and underestimation of DUA-IE burden. METHODS: We analyzed data from State Inpatient Databases and State Emergency Department Databases from six states (FL, GA, IA, NY, UT, VT) from 2011–2015. Patients older than 16 with ICD-9/10 codes for admissions with IE were included. IE was categorized as DUA using ICD-9/10 codes for drugs/conditions associated with injection drug use. We labeled IE cases as a “missed” DUA-IE case if they had no diagnosis of drug use during their index hospitalization but received a drug use diagnosis during an ED visit or inpatient stay in the calendar year of their index IE hospitalization. We compared “missed” DUA-IE cases to DUA-IE cases where drug use was identified in the index hospitalization and non-DUE-IE cases with respect to demographics, length of stay (LOS) and total charges. To assess care fragmentation, we stratified IE groups by whether the patient was admitted to 1 or >1 hospital within 90-days of the index IE admission. RESULTS: There were 52147 non-DUA-IE cases, 6872 DUA-IE cases, and 2676 “missed” DUA-IE cases identified by linking drug use across multiple encounters. Missed cases represented a 39% increase in total DUA-IE cases. Compared to DUA-IE cases identified at index hospitalizations, missed cases were more likely to be older, Black, insured by Medicare, and from rural areas. They also had higher 30-day readmission rate (23.2% vs 14.5%, p< 0.001) and higher charges (p< 0.001), with similar LOS. Fragmented care was most common among patients with missed DUA-IE (33.3%), followed by DUA-IE cases identified during index hospitalization (20.5%) and non-DUA-IE cases (13.7%). Table 1 [Image: see text] Table 2 [Image: see text] CONCLUSION: Missed and/or unrecorded drug use and fragmented care are common features of DUA-IE. This results in underestimation of both DUA-IE prevalence and hospital utilization due to DUA-IE. DISCLOSURES: All Authors: No reported disclosures
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spelling pubmed-77760802021-01-07 35. Missed and Unrecorded Drug Use Among Infective Endocarditis Cases Is Associated with Underestimated Burden of Disease and Fragmented Care: Evidence from Six States Christine, Paul Usher, Michael Pham, Cuong Kelly, Ryan Winkelman, Tyler Open Forum Infect Dis Oral Abstracts BACKGROUND: Studies using national administrative data suggest that hospitalizations for drug use-associated infective endocarditis (DUA-IE) have increased over the last ten years. However, drug use as a contributing factor to IE hospitalizations is often missed or not included in coding documentation, resulting in undercount of DUA-IE. We assessed whether missed drug use during IE hospitalizations was associated with higher levels of fragmented care and underestimation of DUA-IE burden. METHODS: We analyzed data from State Inpatient Databases and State Emergency Department Databases from six states (FL, GA, IA, NY, UT, VT) from 2011–2015. Patients older than 16 with ICD-9/10 codes for admissions with IE were included. IE was categorized as DUA using ICD-9/10 codes for drugs/conditions associated with injection drug use. We labeled IE cases as a “missed” DUA-IE case if they had no diagnosis of drug use during their index hospitalization but received a drug use diagnosis during an ED visit or inpatient stay in the calendar year of their index IE hospitalization. We compared “missed” DUA-IE cases to DUA-IE cases where drug use was identified in the index hospitalization and non-DUE-IE cases with respect to demographics, length of stay (LOS) and total charges. To assess care fragmentation, we stratified IE groups by whether the patient was admitted to 1 or >1 hospital within 90-days of the index IE admission. RESULTS: There were 52147 non-DUA-IE cases, 6872 DUA-IE cases, and 2676 “missed” DUA-IE cases identified by linking drug use across multiple encounters. Missed cases represented a 39% increase in total DUA-IE cases. Compared to DUA-IE cases identified at index hospitalizations, missed cases were more likely to be older, Black, insured by Medicare, and from rural areas. They also had higher 30-day readmission rate (23.2% vs 14.5%, p< 0.001) and higher charges (p< 0.001), with similar LOS. Fragmented care was most common among patients with missed DUA-IE (33.3%), followed by DUA-IE cases identified during index hospitalization (20.5%) and non-DUA-IE cases (13.7%). Table 1 [Image: see text] Table 2 [Image: see text] CONCLUSION: Missed and/or unrecorded drug use and fragmented care are common features of DUA-IE. This results in underestimation of both DUA-IE prevalence and hospital utilization due to DUA-IE. DISCLOSURES: All Authors: No reported disclosures Oxford University Press 2020-12-31 /pmc/articles/PMC7776080/ http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/ofid/ofaa417.034 Text en © The Author 2020. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of Infectious Diseases Society of America. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/ This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs licence (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/), which permits non-commercial reproduction and distribution of the work, in any medium, provided the original work is not altered or transformed in any way, and that the work is properly cited. For commercial re-use, please contact journals.permissions@oup.com
spellingShingle Oral Abstracts
Christine, Paul
Usher, Michael
Pham, Cuong
Kelly, Ryan
Winkelman, Tyler
35. Missed and Unrecorded Drug Use Among Infective Endocarditis Cases Is Associated with Underestimated Burden of Disease and Fragmented Care: Evidence from Six States
title 35. Missed and Unrecorded Drug Use Among Infective Endocarditis Cases Is Associated with Underestimated Burden of Disease and Fragmented Care: Evidence from Six States
title_full 35. Missed and Unrecorded Drug Use Among Infective Endocarditis Cases Is Associated with Underestimated Burden of Disease and Fragmented Care: Evidence from Six States
title_fullStr 35. Missed and Unrecorded Drug Use Among Infective Endocarditis Cases Is Associated with Underestimated Burden of Disease and Fragmented Care: Evidence from Six States
title_full_unstemmed 35. Missed and Unrecorded Drug Use Among Infective Endocarditis Cases Is Associated with Underestimated Burden of Disease and Fragmented Care: Evidence from Six States
title_short 35. Missed and Unrecorded Drug Use Among Infective Endocarditis Cases Is Associated with Underestimated Burden of Disease and Fragmented Care: Evidence from Six States
title_sort 35. missed and unrecorded drug use among infective endocarditis cases is associated with underestimated burden of disease and fragmented care: evidence from six states
topic Oral Abstracts
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7776080/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/ofid/ofaa417.034
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