The ICD-9-Based Illness Severity Score
- 1 October 1998
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wolters Kluwer Health in The Journal of Trauma: Injury, Infection, and Critical Care
- Vol. 45 (4) , 791-799
- https://doi.org/10.1097/00005373-199810000-00032
Abstract
This project is designed to develop and validate a predictive model that is a useful benchmarking and quality of care assessment tool based on International Classification of Diseases, Ninth Revision (ICD-9), diagnoses and procedures. This model, the ICD-9-Based Illness Severity Score (ICISS), was developed from the Agency for Health Care Policy Research's Health Care Utilization Project database and is used to predict hospital survival, hospital length of stay, and hospital charges of injured patients admitted to University of North Carolina Hospitals. The study also compared the outcome predictions of ICISS with those of the long-established diagnosis-related groups (DRG) and the 3M product APR-DRG systems. We performed a retrospective study of 9,483 trauma patients at University of North Carolina Hospitals. A model was developed to predict survival, length of stay, and hospital charges. The accuracy of the model of survival was assessed using the area under the receiver-operating characteristics curve; the adjusted R2 statistic was used to judge the proportion of variation described by the models of length of stay and hospital charges. ICISS proved to be superior to both DRG and APR-DRG in predicting survival of trauma patients: the area under the receiver-operating characteristics curve for prediction of hospital survival was 0.957 for ICISS, 0.707 for DRG, and 0.808 for APR-DRG. ICISS also outperformed DRG and APR-DRG in predicting hospital length of stay and hospital charges: the adjusted R2 for the ICISS length of stay model was 0.57, compared with the DRG length of stay model with adjusted R2 of 0.31 and the APR-DRG length of stay model with adjusted R2 of 0.35. The adjusted R2 for the ICISS hospital charges model was 0.67, compared with the DRG and APR-DRG hospital charges model R2 of 0.46 and 0.51, respectively (p < 0.001 in all cases). This study demonstrates that an ICD-9-based predictive model (ICISS) can markedly outperform both DRG and APR-DRG as a predictor of survival, hospital length of stay, and hospital charges.Keywords
This publication has 27 references indexed in Scilit:
- The effects of insurance coverage on the quality of prenatal careArchives of Family Medicine, 1997
- Identifying Poor-Quality HospitalsMedical Care, 1996
- Is a Diagnosis-Based Classification System Appropriate for Funding Psychiatric Care in Alberta?The Canadian Journal of Psychiatry, 1995
- Diagnosis-Related Group Refinement with Diagnosis- and Procedure-Specific Comorbidities and ComplicationsMedical Care, 1995
- Pulmonary Failure in Geriatric Patients With Burns: The Need for a Diagnosis-Related Group ModifierJournal of Burn Care & Rehabilitation, 1995
- Predicting Inpatient Costs With Admitting Clinical DataMedical Care, 1995
- The Case for Case-Mix Adjustment in Practice ProfilingPublished by American Medical Association (AMA) ,1994
- Severity of Illness Measures Derived From the Uniform Clinical Data Set (UCDSS)Medical Care, 1994
- Quality of Care: Do We Care?Annals of Internal Medicine, 1991
- Does Inappropriate Use Explain Geographic Variations in the Use of Health Care Services?JAMA, 1987