Background: Little is known about patients who die shortly after discharge following any procedures, including percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI). Our aim was to explore the implications of using 30-day deaths after discharge as part of a quality measure for PCI.
Methods: New York State's PCI registry was used to find PCI deaths that occurred after discharge within 30 days of the procedure from January 1, 2015, to November 30, 2017. Patient risk factors and hospital risk-adjusted 30-day mortality before and after discharge were also investigated.
Results: A total of 2121 (1.55%) patients who underwent PCI died within 30 days of the index procedure, and 730 (34.4%) deaths occurred after discharge, with 30% of deaths after discharge (10% of all deaths) occurring during readmission. Among nonemergency patients, 56% of 30-day deaths occurred after discharge. No risk-adjusted 30-day in-hospital and after-discharge hospital mortality outliers were in common. Only 4 of 10 low outliers and 6 of 10 high outliers for 30-day in-hospital mortality and 30-day total (in-hospital plus after-discharge) mortality were in common.
Conclusions: A large percentage of early deaths after PCI occur after discharge, particularly among lower-risk patients. Future efforts should be focused on monitoring these patients. Hospital risk-adjusted mortality assessments are impacted substantially by inclusion of after-discharge deaths, and decisions about their inclusion will affect quality assessment and public reporting initiatives. The pros and cons of including them should be examined carefully.
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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11308099 | PMC |
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jscai.2022.100559 | DOI Listing |
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