Health Services Research & Managerial Epidemiology (Jul 2020)

Pneumonia Hospitalization Coding Changes Associated With Transition From the 9th to 10th Revision of

  • Ryan B. Smithee,
  • Tiffanie M. Markus,
  • Elizabeth Soda,
  • Carlos G. Grijalva,
  • Wei Xing,
  • Nong Shang,
  • Marie R. Griffin,
  • Fernanda C. Lessa

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1177/2333392820939801
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 7

Abstract

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Objectives: To evaluate the impact of International 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 of ICD-10-CM coding. We used a validated ICD-9-CM algorithm and translation of that algorithm to ICD-10-CM to identify pneumonia hospitalizations pre- and post-implementation, respectively. We recoded ICD-10-CM records to ICD-9-CM and vice versa. We calculated sensitivity and positive predictive value (PPV) of the ICD-10-CM algorithm using ICD-9-CM coding as the reference. We used sensitivity and PPV values to calculate an adjustment factor to apply to ICD-10 era rates to enable comparison with ICD-9-CM rates. We reviewed primary diagnoses of charts not meeting the pneumonia definition when recoded. Results: Sensitivity and PPV of the ICD-10-CM algorithm were 94% and 92%, respectively, for young children and 74% and 79% for older adults. The estimated adjustment factor for ICD-10-CM period 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 the ICD-9-CM pneumonia definition that led to recoding in ICD-10-CM as chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) exacerbation. Conclusions: The ICD-10-CM algorithm derived from a validated ICD-9-CM algorithm 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.