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34 Using a National Burn Registry to Develop a Model for Risk-adjusted Length of Stay Benchmarking

INTRODUCTION: Length of stay (LOS) is a frequently reported outcome after a burn injury. Previous literature estimates LOS at 1 day per % total burn surface area (TBSA) but this varies considerably across patients & centers. LOS benchmarking will benefit individual burn centers as a way to measu...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Thompson, Callie M, Bessey, Palmer Q, Higginson, Sara, Hoarle, Kimberly, Hsu, Naiwei, Pardon, Darryl A, Phillips, Bart D, Phillips, Matthew H, Weber, Joan M, Mandell, Samuel P
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Oxford University Press 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8946479/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/jbcr/irac012.037
Descripción
Sumario:INTRODUCTION: Length of stay (LOS) is a frequently reported outcome after a burn injury. Previous literature estimates LOS at 1 day per % total burn surface area (TBSA) but this varies considerably across patients & centers. LOS benchmarking will benefit individual burn centers as a way to measure their performance & set expectations for patients. We sought to create a nationwide, risk-adjusted model to allow for LOS benchmarking based on data from a national burn registry. METHODS: Using data from a national burn registry, we queried admissions from 7/2015-6/2020 & identified 126,129 records with LOS data reported by 103 centers. We selected 23 predictor variables on the basis of completeness (min. 75% required) & clinical significance. Missing data were multiply imputed with a Bayesian Ridge Regression estimator. All statistics were calculated in Python using Numpy & Scikit-Learn libraries. Comparisons of unpenalized linear regression & Gradient boosted (CatBoost) regressor models were performed by measuring the R(2) & concordance correlation coefficient (CCC) on the application of the model to the test dataset. The CatBoost model applied to bootstrapped versions of the entire dataset was then used to calculate O/E ratios for individual burn centers. Confidence intervals (CI) for O/E ratios were calculated using a normal distribution parametric model. Analyses were run on 3 cohorts: all patients, 10-20% TBSA, >20% TBSA. RESULTS: The CatBoost model outperformed the linear regression model with a test R(2) of 0.68 & CCC of 0.81 compared to the regression model with R(2)=0.52, CCC=0.70. The CatBoost was also less biased for higher & lower LOS durations. Due to the CatBoost model’s superiority in predicting the outcome, this model alone was used for O/E ratio calculations. The O/E ratio data from the model for all 3 cohorts are shown in Figure 1. CONCLUSIONS: Gradient boosted regression models provided greater model performance than traditional regression analysis. Using national burn data, we can predict LOS across contributing burn centers while accounting for patient & center characteristics, producing more meaningful O/E ratios. These models provide a risk-adjusted LOS benchmarking using a robust data source, the first of its kind, for burn centers.