Objectives: To evaluate the impact ofInternational Classification of Disease, 10th revision, Clinical Modification (ICD-10-CM) implementation on pneumonia hospitalizations rates, which had declined following pneumococcal conjugate vaccine introduction for infants in 2000. Methods: We randomly selected records from a single hospital 1 year before (n = 500) and after (n = 500) October 2015 implementation ofICD-10-CMcoding. We used a validatedICD-9-CMalgorithm and translation of that algorithm toICD-10-CMto identify pneumonia hospitalizations pre- and post-implementation, respectively. We recodedICD-10-CMrecords toICD-9-CMand vice versa. We calculated sensitivity and positive predictive value (PPV) of theICD-10-CMalgorithm usingICD-9-CMcoding as the reference. We used sensitivity and PPV values to calculate an adjustment factor to apply toICD-10era rates to enable comparison withICD-9-CMrates. We reviewed primary diagnoses of charts not meeting the pneumonia definition when recoded. Results: Sensitivity and PPV of theICD-10-CMalgorithm were 94% and 92%, respectively, for young children and 74% and 79% for older adults. The estimated adjustment factor forICD-10-CMperiod rates was -2.09% (95% credible region {[}CR], -7.71% to +3.0%) for children and +6.76% (95% CR, -3.06% to +16.7%) for older adults. We identified a change in coding adult charts that met theICD-9-CMpneumonia definition that led to recoding inICD-10-CMas chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) exacerbation. Conclusions: TheICD-10-CMalgorithm derived from a validatedICD-9-CMalgorithm should not introduce substantial bias for evaluating pneumonia trends in children. However, changes in coding of pneumonia associated with COPD in adults warrant further study.
CITATION STYLE
Smithee, R. B., Markus, T. M., Soda, E., Grijalva, C. G., Xing, W., Shang, N., … Lessa, F. C. (2020). Pneumonia Hospitalization Coding Changes Associated With Transition From the 9th to 10th Revision of International Classification of Diseases. Health Services Research and Managerial Epidemiology, 7, 233339282093980. https://doi.org/10.1177/2333392820939801
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