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Long‐term central venous catheters (CVCs) facilitate care for patients with chronic illness by providing easy venous access for laboratory tests, administration of medication, and parenteral nutrition. However, several complications resulting from the use of CVCs, including sepsis, extravasation of infusions, and venous thrombosis, can increase associated morbidity and mortality. These complications can also interrupt and delay treatment for the underlying disease and thereby affect outcomes. One of the most common CVC complications is catheter occlusion.[1]
Catheter occlusion occurs in 14% to 36% of patients within 1 to 2 years of catheter placement.[2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8] A catheter occlusion can be partial or complete, and can occur secondary to a variety of mechanical problems, including an uncommon, but potentially life‐threatening, pinch‐off syndrome. Medication or parenteral nutrition can also cause occlusion, which can be acute or gradual, with increasingly sluggish flow through the catheter. Inappropriate concentrations or incompatible mixtures can cause medications to precipitate within the catheter lumen.
Occlusions are either thrombotic or nonthrombotic. One autopsy study of patients with a long‐term CVC found that a fibrin sheath encased the catheter tip in every case.[9] An occluded catheter may compromise patient care[9, 10]; it may cause cancellation or delay of procedures, it potentially interrupts administration of critical therapies including vesicants, it may result in risk of infection, and it potentially leads to catheter replacement. This can further complicate care, leading to increased length of stay (LOS) and hospital costs.
To better understand resource utilization, LOS, and cost implications of alteplase compared with catheter replacement, we conducted a preplanned, retrospective analysis of hospitalized patients captured between January 2006 and December 2011 in the database maintained by Premier. The Premier database is a large, US hospital‐based, service‐level, all‐payer, comparative database, with information collected primarily from nearly 600 geographically diverse, nonprofit, nongovernment community and teaching hospitals.
METHODS
Data Sources
The Premier database contains information on over 42 million hospital discharges (mean 5.5 million discharges/year)one‐fifth of all US hospitalizationsfrom the year 2000 to the present. The database contains data from standard hospital discharge files, including patient demographic information and disease state. Patients can be tracked, with a unique identifier, across the inpatient and hospital‐based outpatient settings, as well as across visits. In addition to the data elements available in most of the standard hospital discharge files, the Premier database also contains a date‐stamped log of billed items, including procedures, medications, and laboratory, diagnostic, and therapeutic services at the individual patient level. Drug utilization information is available by day of stay and includes quantity, dosing, strength used, and cost.
The Premier database has been used extensively to benchmark hospital clinical and financial performance as well as by the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) for drug surveillance and by the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services to evaluate next‐generation payment models. Preliminary comparisons between patient and hospital characteristics for hospitals that submit data to Premier and those of the probability sample of hospitals and patients selected for the National Hospital Discharge Survey suggest that the patient populations are similar with regard to patient age, gender, LOS, mortality, primary discharge diagnosis, and primary procedure groups.
Patient Population
In this retrospective observational database analysis, inpatients of all ages were initially identified who were discharged from a hospital between January 1, 2006 and December 31, 2011 and whose records contained 1 or more International Classification of Diseases, 9th Revision, Clinical Modification (ICD‐9) procedural codes or Current Procedural Terminology (CPT‐4) codes signifying CVC placement. The catheter replacement group comprised patients having a catheter replacement during the hospitalization. The alteplase treatment group was identified through patient billing records and by computing the dose administered (2 mg) during the index hospitalization period. Healthcare Common Procedure Coding System J‐codes (J2996, alteplase recombinant injection 10 mg; J2997, alteplase recombinant 1 mg) were also evaluated during the analysis to supplement the search string identification. To account for and eliminate catheter replacement due to mechanical failure rather than occlusion, patients with ICD‐9 diagnosis code 996.1 for mechanical failure were excluded. Patients with an ICD‐9 diagnosis code for infection or who received antibiotics on the day of replacement were excluded as an additional way to narrow the study to patients with occlusion as the reason for catheter replacement. In addition, patients receiving kidney dialysis, a chronic condition prone to greater‐than‐usual risk of catheter occlusion, were excluded. When a patient had multiple hospital stays with CVC insertions or placement during the study period, the first hospitalization with insertions or placement was used in our analyses.
Of the CVC patient population (N=574,252), 36,680 patient discharges resulted in the need for CVC replacement, alteplase therapy, or both. Patients receiving both replacement and alteplase (N=144) were excluded from analysis, resulting in 33,551 patient discharges with alteplase and 1028 patient discharges with CVC replacement.
Outcome Measures
The main outcomes of interest were LOS and hospital costs after occlusion, and readmissions at 30 and 90 days. Secondary measures, as they were thought to play a role in influencing outcomes, included LOS and costs before occlusion, as well as departmental costs such as pharmacy, radiology, and days in the intensive care unit (ICU).
Statistical Analysis
Univariate descriptive statistics were used to characterize the patient population by patient, clinical, and hospital attributes. In addition, subgroup analyses were performed among patients with any cardiology diagnosis (using ICD‐9 diagnosis or procedure codes), heart failure, myocardial infarction, and cancer, which were potentially overlapping categories chosen prior to initiating the analyses. Data measured on a continuous scale were expressed as mean, standard deviation, range, and median. Categorical data were expressed as count/percentages in the categories. In addition, categorical costs were also examined before and after occlusion. Tables of results included P values comparing patients who received CVC replacement with those who received alteplase across all measures. The [2] tests were used to test for differences in categorical variables, and t tests were utilized for differences in continuous variables.
Multivariable regression modeling was conducted to better compare outcomes associated with catheter replacement versus alteplase treatment. Linear regression models were performed to evaluate hospital costs and LOS during the initial hospital discharge. Logistic regression models were performed to evaluate the odds of readmission at 30 and 90 days following discharge. All multivariable models controlled for factors found to be statistically significant in univariate analysis. The covariates varied by model, but generally included age, race, sex, cancer, 3M All Patient Refined Diagnosis Related Group risk of mortality and severity of illness, cerebrovascular disease, renal disease, payer, myocardial infarction, hemiplegia/paraplegia, chronic or acute diabetes, peripheral vascular disease, complication, admission source, admission type, congestive heart failure, dementia, metastatic solid tumor, rheumatic disease, peptic ulcer disease, chronic pulmonary disease, hospital teaching status, urban/rural location, US Census region, and number of hospital beds. Certain of these variables, such as 3M measures of severity and risk, as well as measures of LOS and costs before occlusion, were considered as ways to understand differences in risk of increased costs among patients. For each multivariable model, covariates eligible for inclusion in the models were selected using a backward selection method (logistic used stepwise) until all variables remaining in the model were significant at P0.2.
RESULTS
This study included 34,579 patients who first had a CVC insertion and then were treated for a CVC occlusion by receiving a replacement CVC (n=1028) or by receiving alteplase (2 mg) administration (n=33,551) during the same hospitalization (Table 1). Patients who received alteplase tended to be younger (6019 vs 6220 years old). More than 50% were at least 65 years of age. Twelve percent of alteplase patients were black, whereas 18.5% of catheter‐replacement patients were black.
Catheter Replacement, n=1,028 | Alteplase Treatment, n=33,551 | |
---|---|---|
| ||
Age group, ya | ||
Under 18 | 29 (2.8%) | 984 (2.9%) |
1834 | 84 (8.2%) | 2,479 (7.4%) |
3544 | 73 (7.1%) | 2,826 (8.4%) |
4554 | 116 (11.3%) | 5,217 (15.5%) |
5564 | 210 (20.4%) | 6,761 (20.1%) |
6574 | 203 (19.7%) | 6,741 (20.1%) |
75+ | 313 (30.4%) | 8,543 (25.5%) |
Mean (SD) | 62 (20) | 60 (19) |
Sex | ||
Female | 565 (55.0%) | 18,172 (54.2%) |
Male | 463 (45.0%) | 15,378 (45.8%) |
Unknown | 0 (0%) | 1 (0%) |
Race/ethnicitya | ||
Black | 190 (18.5%) | 4,057 (12.1%) |
Hispanic | 40 (3.9%) | 1,098 (3.3%) |
Other | 126 (12.3%) | 6,250 (18.6%) |
White | 672 (65.4%) | 22,146 (66.0%) |
Comorbid conditions | ||
Myocardial infarction | 96 (9.3%) | 3,746 (11.2%) |
Congestive heart failure | 258 (25.1%) | 8,210 (24.5%) |
Peripheral vascular disease | 104 (10.1%) | 3,451 (10.3%) |
Cerebrovascular disease | 115 (11.2%) | 3,528 (10.5%) |
Dementia | 33 (3.2%) | 838 (2.5%) |
Chronic pulmonary diseasea | 264 (25.7%) | 10,495 (31.3%) |
Rheumatic disease | 37 (3.6%) | 1,344 (4.0%) |
Peptic ulcer disease | 41 (4.0%) | 1,068 (3.2%) |
Mild liver diseasea | 94 (9.1%) | 2,392 (7.1%) |
Moderate/severe liver diseasea | 29 (2.8%) | 531 (1.6%) |
Acute diabetes | 255 (24.8%) | 9,185 (27.4%) |
Chronic diabetesa | 44 (4.3%) | 2,327 (6.9%) |
Hemiplegia paraplegia | 51 (5.0%) | 1,909 (5.7%) |
Renal diseasea | 209 (20.3%) | 5,351 (16.0%) |
Cancera | 207 (20.1%) | 5,685 (16.9%) |
Metastatic solid tumora | 100 (9.7%) | 2,441 (7.3%) |
AIDS/HIV | 4 (0.4%) | 244 (0.7%) |
3M APR‐DRG Severity of Illnessa | ||
1‐minor | 36 (3.5%) | 769 (2.3%) |
2‐moderate | 172 (16.7%) | 4,109 (12.2%) |
3‐major | 384 (37.3%) | 12,175 (36.3%) |
4‐extreme | 436 (42.4%) | 16,497 (49.2%) |
Unknown | 0 (0%) | 1 (0%) |
3M APR‐DRG Risk of Mortalitya | ||
1‐minor | 159 (15.5%) | 4,716 (14.1%) |
2‐moderate | 253 (24.6%) | 6,746 (20.1%) |
3‐major | 313 (30.4%) | 10,569 (31.5%) |
4‐mxtreme | 303 (29.5%) | 11,519 (34.3%) |
Unknown | 0 (0%) | 1 (0%) |
Alteplase patients were significantly more likely to have a diagnosis of chronic pulmonary disease, liver disease, renal disease, chronic diabetes (ie, diabetes with complications), and cancer. There was an equivalent number of urban and rural hospitals across the 2 groups of patients (Table 2); however, there were regional differences including a higher proportion of catheter‐replacement patients from the East North Central and Middle Atlantic areas and a lower proportion of catheter‐replacement patients from Mountain and Pacific states. Catheter‐replacement patients more frequently were treated in teaching hospitals and in hospitals of larger size.
Catheter Replacement, n=1,028 | Alteplase Treatment, n=33,551 | |
---|---|---|
| ||
Provider regiona | ||
New England | 28 (2.7%) | 976 (2.9%) |
Middle Atlantic | 227 (22.1%) | 1,944 (5.8%) |
South Atlantic | 247 (24.0%) | 8,047 (24.0%) |
East North Central | 153 (14.9%) | 3,015 (9.0%) |
East South Central | 14 (1.4%) | 1,345 (4.0%) |
West North Central | 98 (9.5%) | 3,590 (10.7%) |
West South Central | 112 (10.9%) | 5,096 (15.2%) |
Mountain | 48 (4.7%) | 3,339 (9.9%) |
Pacific | 94 (9.1%) | 6,083 (18.1%) |
Unknown | 7 (0.7%) | 116 (0.3%) |
Population served | ||
Rural | 56 (5.4%) | 1,838 (5.5%) |
Urban | 972 (94.6%) | 31,713 (94.5%) |
Teaching statusa | ||
Nonteaching | 431 (41.9%) | 18,598 (55.4%) |
Teaching | 597 (58.1%) | 14,953 (4.6%) |
Hospital size, no. of bedsa | ||
<100 | 4 (0.4%) | 475 (1.4%) |
100199 | 56 (5.4%) | 1,725 (5.1%) |
200299 | 124 (12.1%) | 5,907 (17.6%) |
300499 | 432 (42.0%) | 13,790 (41.1%) |
500+ | 412 (40.1%) | 11,654 (34.7%) |
Primary payora | ||
Commercial | 50 (4.9%) | 1,779 (5.3%) |
Managed care | 221 (21.5%) | 6,888 (20.5%) |
Medicaid | 132 (12.8%) | 4,146 (12.4%) |
Medicare | 572 (55.6%) | 17,226 (51.3%) |
Other government programs | 9 (0.9%) | 439 (1.3%) |
Any other payor | 44 (4.3%) | 3,073 (9.2%) |
Admission sourcea | ||
Emergency department | 424 (41.2%) | 12,741 (38.0%) |
Physician referral | 390 (37.9%) | 14,502 (43.2%) |
Transfer from another health facility | 154 (15.0%) | 4,109 (12.2%) |
Unknown | 60 (5.8%) | 2,199 (6.5%) |
Admission typea | ||
Elective | 205 (19.9%) | 5,872 (17.5%) |
Emergency | 613 (59.6%) | 19,660 (58.6%) |
Newborn | 9 (0.9%) | 37 (0.1%) |
Trauma center | 3 (0.3%) | 279 (0.8%) |
Urgent | 192 (18.7%) | 7,573 (22.6%) |
Unknown | 6 (0.6%) | 130 (0.4%) |
After covariate adjustment for baseline measurements significantly related to each outcome, average daily post occlusion costs were estimated to be $317 lower for alteplase recipients than for patients who received catheter replacement ($317; 95% confidence interval [CI]: $238‐$392; P<0.0001) (Table 3). Average adjusted total post occlusion costs were $1419 lower for alteplase recipients than for patients who received catheter replacement ($1418; 95% CI: $307‐$2458; P=0.012).
CVC Replace Only, n=1,028 | Alteplase Only, n=33,551 | |
---|---|---|
| ||
30‐day readmission | 24.6% | 23.7% |
90‐day readmission | 35.1% | 33.9% |
Preocclusion | ||
Mean (SD) length of stay, days | 3.8 (6.7) | 7.3 (6.9) |
Mean (SD) total cost | $10,485 ($29,088) | $18,546 ($22,658) |
Mean (SD) cost per day | $2,876 ($3,046) | $2,637 ($1,783) |
Postocclusion | ||
Mean (SD) length of stay, days | 8.8 (11.0) | 8.8 (10.0) |
Mean (SD) total cost | $18,714 ($32,189) | $16,765 ($29,966) |
Mean (SD) cost per day | $2,146 ($2,995) | $2,058 ($6,585) |
Contributing to the lower cost were certain revenue‐center specific costs (Table 4). Total room and board costs were different between the alteplase and catheter‐replacement groups in both the pre‐ and postocclusion periods; this was related to the difference between the 2 comparison groups in postocclusion LOS of about 0.3 days (Table 5). However, the differences favored alteplase use over catheter replacement. Cardiology/electrocardiography costs were lower for catheter replacement in the preocclusion period but lower for alteplase use in the postocclusion period. Emergency department costs were higher for catheter replacement in both periods, as were respiratory costs in the same manner. Additionally, costs for laboratory tests, nursing, operating room/surgery, pharmacy, radiology, supplies, and ICU room and board were lower in the preocclusion period but higher in the postocclusion period for catheter‐replacement patients. It was unclear why the pharmacy costs after catheter replacement would have increased for catheter‐replacement patients in contrast to the decrease for alteplase‐treated patients, but because this occurred at an average daily basis as well, it appeared that catheter‐replacement patients may have received additional medications. Average adjusted postocclusion LOS was similar for alteplase and catheter‐replacement recipients (P=0.24), suggesting that decreased total costs were due to reasons other than shorter LOS.
Preocclusiona | Postocclusiona | |||
---|---|---|---|---|
CVC Replacement Only, n=1,028 | Alteplase Only, n=33,551 | CVC Replacement Only, n=1,028 | Alteplase Onlyn=33,551 | |
| ||||
Total room and board cost | ||||
Mean (SD) total cost | $4,380 ($9,545) | $8,535 ($10,175)b | $8,394 ($14,393) | $8,437 ($18,341)b |
Mean (SD) cost per day | $693 ($734) | $1,097 ($724)b | $751 ($536) | $983 ($3,250) |
Cardiology/ECG cost | ||||
Mean (SD) total cost | $82 ($806) | $154 ($605)b | $124 ($540) | $107 ($735)b |
Mean (SD) cost per day | $17 ($96) | $26 ($131)b | $17 ($93) | $19 ($217)b |
Emergency department cost | ||||
Mean (SD) total cost | $10 ($91) | $36 ($284)b | $10 ($67) | $12 ($195) |
Mean (SD) cost per day | $4 ($32) | $8 ($65)b | $2 ($19) | $6 ($76) |
Laboratory cost | ||||
Mean (SD) total cost | $864 ($2,538) | $1,425 ($3,622)b | $1,471 ($5,614) | $1,175 ($3,961) |
Mean (SD) cost per day | $140 ($314) | $180 ($269)b | $139 ($313) | $142 ($465)b |
Nursing Cost | ||||
Mean (SD) total cost | $218 ($1,497) | $224 ($2,364)b | $432 ($2,538) | $231 ($2,785) |
Mean (SD) cost per day | $39 ($166) | $24 ($127)b | $35 ($140) | $21 ($112) |
OR/surgery cost | ||||
Mean (SD) total cost | $902 ($4,743) | $1,602 ($3,597)b | $1,437 ($3,029) | $847 ($2,701)b |
Mean (SD) cost per day | $207 ($495) | $267 ($513)b | $302 ($646) | $130 ($827)b |
Pharmacy cost | ||||
Mean (SD) total cost | $2,085 ($20,338) | $3,014 ($6,408)b | $3,200 ($16,396) | $2,914 ($8,383)b |
Mean (SD) cost per day | $263 ($1,509) | $368 ($583)b | $362 ($2,427) | $347 ($853)b |
Radiology cost | ||||
Mean (SD) total cost | $470 ($869) | $782 ($1,031)b | $731 ($1,160) | $505 ($1,550)b |
Mean (SD) cost per day | $133 ($362) | $130 ($189)b | $144 ($293) | $83 ($469)b |
Respiratory cost | ||||
Mean (SD) total cost | $391 ($1,442) | $895 ($2,160)b | $673 ($2,209) | $783 ($2,297)b |
Mean (SD) cost per day | $51 ($121) | $104 ($170)b | $61 ($115) | $81 ($280)b |
Supply cost | ||||
Mean (SD) total cost | $834 ($3,221) | $1,408 ($5,871)b | $1,636 ($7,250) | $1,117 ($4,477)b |
Mean (SD) cost per day | $208 ($1,244) | $211 ($789)b | $264 ($871) | $165 ($1,529)b |
Other therapy cost | ||||
Mean (SD) total cost | $179 ($702) | $355 ($815)b | $436 ($837) | $509 ($1,263)b |
Mean (SD) cost per day | $30 ($81) | $46 ($98)b | $51 ($106) | $66 ($481)b |
Other departments cost | ||||
Mean (SD) total cost | $26 ($710) | $1 ($36) | $74 ($1,127) | $3 ($144) b |
Mean (SD) cost per day | $3 ($56) | $0 ($5) | $6 ($86) | $0 ($13)b |
Fees cost | ||||
Mean (SD) total cost | $38 ($370) | $82 ($969)b | $67 ($340) | $86 ($2,704) |
Mean (SD) cost per day | $7 ($47) | $12 ($77)b | $12 ($120) | $12 ($843) |
Healthcare services cost | ||||
Mean (SD) total cost | $5 ($53) | $31 ($1,052)b | $29 ($515) | $35 ($1,162) |
Mean (SD) cost per day | $1 ($10) | $3 ($65)b | $2 ($11) | $3 ($54) |
ICU room and board cost | ||||
Mean (SD) total cost | $2,085 ($7,700) | $4,333 ($8,826)b | $3,158 ($10,767) | $2,884 ($15,863) |
Mean (SD) cost per day | $293 ($677) | $543 ($854)b | $222 ($512) | $323 ($2,330) |
Model | Parameter Estimate | Summary Statistic | Estimate (95% CI) |
---|---|---|---|
| |||
30‐day readmissiona | 0.0234 | Odds ratio | 1.048 (0.899 to 1.221) |
90‐day readmissionb | 0.0248 | Odds ratio | 1.051 (0.915 to 1.207) |
Postocclusion total costsc | 0.0842 | Mean differenced | $1,418.69 ($2,458.12 to $307.27)f |
Postocclusion total cost per daye | 0.1857 | Mean differenced | $317.20 ($392.24 to $238.22)f |
Post occlusion length of stayg | 0.0313 | Mean differenced | 0.299 (0.196 to 0.820) |
Unadjusted 30‐ and 90‐day readmission rates were 24.6% and 35.1% for CVC replacement and slightly lower at 23.7% and 33.9% for alteplase (Table 3), respectively. Odds of readmission after adjusting for patient and hospital factors were not significantly different at 30 days (odds ratio [OR]: 1.048, 95% CI: 0.899‐1.221; P=0.55) or at 90 days (OR: 1.051, 95% CI: 0.915‐1.207; P=0.48) (Table 5). Subgroup analyses for patients with a diagnosis of heart failure, myocardial infarction, and cancer revealed similar results.
DISCUSSION
The cost of healthcare in the United States has risen at an outstanding rate compared with other countries. Our percentage of gross national product spent on healthcare is on the order of 16% to 18%, almost twice as much as the next most industrialized country in terms of healthcare expenditure.[11] In the current era, finding opportunities to reduce healthcare costs without negatively impacting quality of care is the name of the game. Professional societies have come together under the campaign of Choosing Wisely: An Initiative of the ABIM (American Board of Internal Medicine) Foundation to help educate clinicians and patients on cost‐containment strategies.[12] Research that demonstrates opportunities to reduce cost will help healthcare providers choose wisely among diagnostic and therapeutic options for patients. Our study demonstrated that the use of a drug such as alteplase in clearing CVC catheter obstruction was significantly less costly to the hospital than catheter replacement.
Cathflo Activase (alteplase: Genentech, South San Francisco, CA), the only FDA‐approved thrombolytic for the restoration of central venous catheter function, is the current standard treatment for catheter occlusions in the United States. A dose of 2 mg in 2 mL is instilled in patients weighing 30 kg or 110% of the internal lumen volume of the catheter not to exceed 2 mg in 2 mL for those patients weighing <30 kg. Haire et al. showed that a 2‐mg dose of alteplase was more effective than urokinase (5000 IU) for treating radiographically proven thrombotic occlusion of a CVC after a dwell time of 120 minutes.[13] In the Cardiovascular thrombolytic used to Open Occluded Lines (COOL) trial, one 2‐mg dose of alteplase cleared the catheter occlusion after 120 minutes in 74% of patients, compared with only 17% of patients who received a placebo. Studies have confirmed the safety and efficacy of alteplase administered at various time intervals in different long‐term catheters, including peripherally inserted central catheters, with major hemorrhage reported in 0.3% of patients.[14, 15, 16]
Adding to the knowledge of patient outcomes from clinical studies, many health outcomes studies have demonstrated benefit in cost containment through decreasing LOS, which one can argue is just shifting the cost to an earlier part of the stay. Even though this is highly beneficial, it does not address the core resource utilization within the hospital. Our study found its cost benefit not in the LOS, but in decreasing core resource utilization such as radiology, lab, nursing, and supplies. If patients are admitted for a noncardiovascular condition and have CVC occlusion, using alteplase to clear the CVC occlusion along with implementing strategies to manage the underlying disease to reduce the LOS becomes a powerful opportunity to impact cost. Among patients who may come to the hospital for just the CVC occlusion, the LOS should be short. There may be no significant opportunity to reduce the LOS in those cases, but opportunities to decrease core hospital resource utilization with alteplase make this approach beneficial if the patient can tolerate it.
Limitations of the study include the retrospective and administrative nature of the database used, which is unable to provide certain clinical measures as would be available at the patient's bedside when treatment choices are being made. Had they been available, we might have included them in our assessment of whether patients who underwent CVC replacement were significantly different from those who received alteplase. In addition, not all hospitals in the database had charge masters that facilitated identification of CVC replacements or reinsertions, requiring the use of CPT‐4 codes and evidence of new CVCs being placed or inserted. Certain patients were excluded if there was conflicting information about whether the CVC was new within the hospital stay or dwelling in the patient prior to admission. Also, dialysis patients were excluded because they were not part of any approved indication for alteplase 2 mg, and this group is particularly prone to catheter obstruction. As such, they represent more complicated cases than the norm; this exclusion may have limited the overall generalizability of the study. The study also relied on charge master (billing) data to identify the use of alteplase and other treatments, where there is the potential, albeit minimal, for inaccuracies in the data. Of greater importance, the study relied on ICD‐9 coding to identify comorbid conditions, and as in other studies using similar data sources, such methods are subject to coding errors and omissions. However, many of the listed limitations above were not thought to be different between the comparison groups or more problematic for this study than for other studies based on similar data sources.
CONCLUSION
Among patients treated for an occluded CVC, alteplase‐treated patients had lower daily postocclusion costs and lower total postocclusion costs than patients who received catheter replacement. Differences in costs did not appear to be driven by differences in postocclusion LOS. Readmissions at 30‐ and 90‐day periods were found to be similar between alteplase recipients and catheter‐replacement patients.
Acknowledgements
The authors thank W. Kenne Mountford for his editorial assistance with a prior version of the article and Dima Qato for assistance with the analyses. Additional editorial assistance was provided by Steve Melvin. This assistance was funded by Genentech, Inc.
Disclosures: This study was funded by Genentech, Inc. F. R. Ernst and C. Lipkin are employees of Premier, which was contracted by Genentech to conduct the study covered in this article. E. Chen is an employee of and holds stock in Genentech. D. Tayama is an employee of Genentech. A. N. Amin received research funding from Premier, which was contracted by Genentech to conduct the study covered in this article.
- Management of occlusion and thrombosis associated with long‐term indwelling central venous catheters. Lancet. 2009;374:159–169. , , , , et al.
- Children's Oncology Group. Prophylactic urokinase in the management of long‐term venous access devices in children; a Children's Oncology Group study. J Clin Oncol. 2004;22:2718–2723. , , , , , ;
- Central venous catheter‐related complications in children with oncological/hematological diseases: an observational study of 418 devices. Ann Oncol. 1985;16:648–654. , , , et al.
- A cross‐sectional study evaluating post‐thrombotic syndrome in children. Thromb Res. 2003;111:227–233. , , , et al.
- Complications and management of implanted venous access catheters. J Clin Oncol. 1985;3:710–717. , , , .
- Local installation of small doses of streptokinase for treatment of thrombotic occlusions of long‐term access catheters. J Clin Oncol. 1983;1:572–573. .
- Are clinical signs accurate indicators of the cause of central venous catheter occlusion? J Parenter Enteral Nutr. 1995;19:75–79. , , .
- Mechanism and management of persistent withdrawal occlusion. Am Surg. 1988;54:326–328. , .
- Catheter‐related thrombosis in pediatrics. Pediatr Nurs. 2002;28:97–102, 105–106. .
- Reopen the pipeline. Nursing. 2005;35:54–61. .
- Chemotherapy extravasation: a consequence of fibrin sheath formation around venous access devices. Oncol Nurs Forum. 1995;22:675–680. , .
- Organisation for Economic Co‐operation and Development (OECD). Statistics. OECD Health Data 2010, June 2010. http://www.oecd.org/unitedstates/Briefing‐Note‐USA‐2013.pdf. Accessed May 8, 2014.
- ABIM Foundation. Choosing Wisely: An Initiative of the ABIM Foundation. (2013). Available at: http://www.choosingwisely.org. Accessed April 6, 2013.
- Urokinase versus recombinant tissue plasminogen activator in thrombosed central venous catheters: a double‐blinded, randomized trial. Thromb Haemost. 1994;72:543–547. , , , .
- Recombinant tissue plasminogen activator (alteplase) for restoration of flow in occluded central venous access devices: a double‐blind placebo‐controlled trial—the Cardiovascular Thrombolytic to Open Occluded Lines (COOL) efficacy trial. J Vasc Interv Radiol. 2001;12:951–955. , , , et al.
- Safety and efficacy of alteplase for restoring function in occluded central venous catheters: results of the cardiovascular thrombolytic to open occluded lines trial. J Clin Oncol. 2002;20:317–324. , , , et al.
- Alteplase for treatment of occluded peripherally inserted central catheters: safety and efficacy in 240 patients. J Vasc Interv Radiol. 2004;15:45–49. , , , .
Long‐term central venous catheters (CVCs) facilitate care for patients with chronic illness by providing easy venous access for laboratory tests, administration of medication, and parenteral nutrition. However, several complications resulting from the use of CVCs, including sepsis, extravasation of infusions, and venous thrombosis, can increase associated morbidity and mortality. These complications can also interrupt and delay treatment for the underlying disease and thereby affect outcomes. One of the most common CVC complications is catheter occlusion.[1]
Catheter occlusion occurs in 14% to 36% of patients within 1 to 2 years of catheter placement.[2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8] A catheter occlusion can be partial or complete, and can occur secondary to a variety of mechanical problems, including an uncommon, but potentially life‐threatening, pinch‐off syndrome. Medication or parenteral nutrition can also cause occlusion, which can be acute or gradual, with increasingly sluggish flow through the catheter. Inappropriate concentrations or incompatible mixtures can cause medications to precipitate within the catheter lumen.
Occlusions are either thrombotic or nonthrombotic. One autopsy study of patients with a long‐term CVC found that a fibrin sheath encased the catheter tip in every case.[9] An occluded catheter may compromise patient care[9, 10]; it may cause cancellation or delay of procedures, it potentially interrupts administration of critical therapies including vesicants, it may result in risk of infection, and it potentially leads to catheter replacement. This can further complicate care, leading to increased length of stay (LOS) and hospital costs.
To better understand resource utilization, LOS, and cost implications of alteplase compared with catheter replacement, we conducted a preplanned, retrospective analysis of hospitalized patients captured between January 2006 and December 2011 in the database maintained by Premier. The Premier database is a large, US hospital‐based, service‐level, all‐payer, comparative database, with information collected primarily from nearly 600 geographically diverse, nonprofit, nongovernment community and teaching hospitals.
METHODS
Data Sources
The Premier database contains information on over 42 million hospital discharges (mean 5.5 million discharges/year)one‐fifth of all US hospitalizationsfrom the year 2000 to the present. The database contains data from standard hospital discharge files, including patient demographic information and disease state. Patients can be tracked, with a unique identifier, across the inpatient and hospital‐based outpatient settings, as well as across visits. In addition to the data elements available in most of the standard hospital discharge files, the Premier database also contains a date‐stamped log of billed items, including procedures, medications, and laboratory, diagnostic, and therapeutic services at the individual patient level. Drug utilization information is available by day of stay and includes quantity, dosing, strength used, and cost.
The Premier database has been used extensively to benchmark hospital clinical and financial performance as well as by the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) for drug surveillance and by the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services to evaluate next‐generation payment models. Preliminary comparisons between patient and hospital characteristics for hospitals that submit data to Premier and those of the probability sample of hospitals and patients selected for the National Hospital Discharge Survey suggest that the patient populations are similar with regard to patient age, gender, LOS, mortality, primary discharge diagnosis, and primary procedure groups.
Patient Population
In this retrospective observational database analysis, inpatients of all ages were initially identified who were discharged from a hospital between January 1, 2006 and December 31, 2011 and whose records contained 1 or more International Classification of Diseases, 9th Revision, Clinical Modification (ICD‐9) procedural codes or Current Procedural Terminology (CPT‐4) codes signifying CVC placement. The catheter replacement group comprised patients having a catheter replacement during the hospitalization. The alteplase treatment group was identified through patient billing records and by computing the dose administered (2 mg) during the index hospitalization period. Healthcare Common Procedure Coding System J‐codes (J2996, alteplase recombinant injection 10 mg; J2997, alteplase recombinant 1 mg) were also evaluated during the analysis to supplement the search string identification. To account for and eliminate catheter replacement due to mechanical failure rather than occlusion, patients with ICD‐9 diagnosis code 996.1 for mechanical failure were excluded. Patients with an ICD‐9 diagnosis code for infection or who received antibiotics on the day of replacement were excluded as an additional way to narrow the study to patients with occlusion as the reason for catheter replacement. In addition, patients receiving kidney dialysis, a chronic condition prone to greater‐than‐usual risk of catheter occlusion, were excluded. When a patient had multiple hospital stays with CVC insertions or placement during the study period, the first hospitalization with insertions or placement was used in our analyses.
Of the CVC patient population (N=574,252), 36,680 patient discharges resulted in the need for CVC replacement, alteplase therapy, or both. Patients receiving both replacement and alteplase (N=144) were excluded from analysis, resulting in 33,551 patient discharges with alteplase and 1028 patient discharges with CVC replacement.
Outcome Measures
The main outcomes of interest were LOS and hospital costs after occlusion, and readmissions at 30 and 90 days. Secondary measures, as they were thought to play a role in influencing outcomes, included LOS and costs before occlusion, as well as departmental costs such as pharmacy, radiology, and days in the intensive care unit (ICU).
Statistical Analysis
Univariate descriptive statistics were used to characterize the patient population by patient, clinical, and hospital attributes. In addition, subgroup analyses were performed among patients with any cardiology diagnosis (using ICD‐9 diagnosis or procedure codes), heart failure, myocardial infarction, and cancer, which were potentially overlapping categories chosen prior to initiating the analyses. Data measured on a continuous scale were expressed as mean, standard deviation, range, and median. Categorical data were expressed as count/percentages in the categories. In addition, categorical costs were also examined before and after occlusion. Tables of results included P values comparing patients who received CVC replacement with those who received alteplase across all measures. The [2] tests were used to test for differences in categorical variables, and t tests were utilized for differences in continuous variables.
Multivariable regression modeling was conducted to better compare outcomes associated with catheter replacement versus alteplase treatment. Linear regression models were performed to evaluate hospital costs and LOS during the initial hospital discharge. Logistic regression models were performed to evaluate the odds of readmission at 30 and 90 days following discharge. All multivariable models controlled for factors found to be statistically significant in univariate analysis. The covariates varied by model, but generally included age, race, sex, cancer, 3M All Patient Refined Diagnosis Related Group risk of mortality and severity of illness, cerebrovascular disease, renal disease, payer, myocardial infarction, hemiplegia/paraplegia, chronic or acute diabetes, peripheral vascular disease, complication, admission source, admission type, congestive heart failure, dementia, metastatic solid tumor, rheumatic disease, peptic ulcer disease, chronic pulmonary disease, hospital teaching status, urban/rural location, US Census region, and number of hospital beds. Certain of these variables, such as 3M measures of severity and risk, as well as measures of LOS and costs before occlusion, were considered as ways to understand differences in risk of increased costs among patients. For each multivariable model, covariates eligible for inclusion in the models were selected using a backward selection method (logistic used stepwise) until all variables remaining in the model were significant at P0.2.
RESULTS
This study included 34,579 patients who first had a CVC insertion and then were treated for a CVC occlusion by receiving a replacement CVC (n=1028) or by receiving alteplase (2 mg) administration (n=33,551) during the same hospitalization (Table 1). Patients who received alteplase tended to be younger (6019 vs 6220 years old). More than 50% were at least 65 years of age. Twelve percent of alteplase patients were black, whereas 18.5% of catheter‐replacement patients were black.
Catheter Replacement, n=1,028 | Alteplase Treatment, n=33,551 | |
---|---|---|
| ||
Age group, ya | ||
Under 18 | 29 (2.8%) | 984 (2.9%) |
1834 | 84 (8.2%) | 2,479 (7.4%) |
3544 | 73 (7.1%) | 2,826 (8.4%) |
4554 | 116 (11.3%) | 5,217 (15.5%) |
5564 | 210 (20.4%) | 6,761 (20.1%) |
6574 | 203 (19.7%) | 6,741 (20.1%) |
75+ | 313 (30.4%) | 8,543 (25.5%) |
Mean (SD) | 62 (20) | 60 (19) |
Sex | ||
Female | 565 (55.0%) | 18,172 (54.2%) |
Male | 463 (45.0%) | 15,378 (45.8%) |
Unknown | 0 (0%) | 1 (0%) |
Race/ethnicitya | ||
Black | 190 (18.5%) | 4,057 (12.1%) |
Hispanic | 40 (3.9%) | 1,098 (3.3%) |
Other | 126 (12.3%) | 6,250 (18.6%) |
White | 672 (65.4%) | 22,146 (66.0%) |
Comorbid conditions | ||
Myocardial infarction | 96 (9.3%) | 3,746 (11.2%) |
Congestive heart failure | 258 (25.1%) | 8,210 (24.5%) |
Peripheral vascular disease | 104 (10.1%) | 3,451 (10.3%) |
Cerebrovascular disease | 115 (11.2%) | 3,528 (10.5%) |
Dementia | 33 (3.2%) | 838 (2.5%) |
Chronic pulmonary diseasea | 264 (25.7%) | 10,495 (31.3%) |
Rheumatic disease | 37 (3.6%) | 1,344 (4.0%) |
Peptic ulcer disease | 41 (4.0%) | 1,068 (3.2%) |
Mild liver diseasea | 94 (9.1%) | 2,392 (7.1%) |
Moderate/severe liver diseasea | 29 (2.8%) | 531 (1.6%) |
Acute diabetes | 255 (24.8%) | 9,185 (27.4%) |
Chronic diabetesa | 44 (4.3%) | 2,327 (6.9%) |
Hemiplegia paraplegia | 51 (5.0%) | 1,909 (5.7%) |
Renal diseasea | 209 (20.3%) | 5,351 (16.0%) |
Cancera | 207 (20.1%) | 5,685 (16.9%) |
Metastatic solid tumora | 100 (9.7%) | 2,441 (7.3%) |
AIDS/HIV | 4 (0.4%) | 244 (0.7%) |
3M APR‐DRG Severity of Illnessa | ||
1‐minor | 36 (3.5%) | 769 (2.3%) |
2‐moderate | 172 (16.7%) | 4,109 (12.2%) |
3‐major | 384 (37.3%) | 12,175 (36.3%) |
4‐extreme | 436 (42.4%) | 16,497 (49.2%) |
Unknown | 0 (0%) | 1 (0%) |
3M APR‐DRG Risk of Mortalitya | ||
1‐minor | 159 (15.5%) | 4,716 (14.1%) |
2‐moderate | 253 (24.6%) | 6,746 (20.1%) |
3‐major | 313 (30.4%) | 10,569 (31.5%) |
4‐mxtreme | 303 (29.5%) | 11,519 (34.3%) |
Unknown | 0 (0%) | 1 (0%) |
Alteplase patients were significantly more likely to have a diagnosis of chronic pulmonary disease, liver disease, renal disease, chronic diabetes (ie, diabetes with complications), and cancer. There was an equivalent number of urban and rural hospitals across the 2 groups of patients (Table 2); however, there were regional differences including a higher proportion of catheter‐replacement patients from the East North Central and Middle Atlantic areas and a lower proportion of catheter‐replacement patients from Mountain and Pacific states. Catheter‐replacement patients more frequently were treated in teaching hospitals and in hospitals of larger size.
Catheter Replacement, n=1,028 | Alteplase Treatment, n=33,551 | |
---|---|---|
| ||
Provider regiona | ||
New England | 28 (2.7%) | 976 (2.9%) |
Middle Atlantic | 227 (22.1%) | 1,944 (5.8%) |
South Atlantic | 247 (24.0%) | 8,047 (24.0%) |
East North Central | 153 (14.9%) | 3,015 (9.0%) |
East South Central | 14 (1.4%) | 1,345 (4.0%) |
West North Central | 98 (9.5%) | 3,590 (10.7%) |
West South Central | 112 (10.9%) | 5,096 (15.2%) |
Mountain | 48 (4.7%) | 3,339 (9.9%) |
Pacific | 94 (9.1%) | 6,083 (18.1%) |
Unknown | 7 (0.7%) | 116 (0.3%) |
Population served | ||
Rural | 56 (5.4%) | 1,838 (5.5%) |
Urban | 972 (94.6%) | 31,713 (94.5%) |
Teaching statusa | ||
Nonteaching | 431 (41.9%) | 18,598 (55.4%) |
Teaching | 597 (58.1%) | 14,953 (4.6%) |
Hospital size, no. of bedsa | ||
<100 | 4 (0.4%) | 475 (1.4%) |
100199 | 56 (5.4%) | 1,725 (5.1%) |
200299 | 124 (12.1%) | 5,907 (17.6%) |
300499 | 432 (42.0%) | 13,790 (41.1%) |
500+ | 412 (40.1%) | 11,654 (34.7%) |
Primary payora | ||
Commercial | 50 (4.9%) | 1,779 (5.3%) |
Managed care | 221 (21.5%) | 6,888 (20.5%) |
Medicaid | 132 (12.8%) | 4,146 (12.4%) |
Medicare | 572 (55.6%) | 17,226 (51.3%) |
Other government programs | 9 (0.9%) | 439 (1.3%) |
Any other payor | 44 (4.3%) | 3,073 (9.2%) |
Admission sourcea | ||
Emergency department | 424 (41.2%) | 12,741 (38.0%) |
Physician referral | 390 (37.9%) | 14,502 (43.2%) |
Transfer from another health facility | 154 (15.0%) | 4,109 (12.2%) |
Unknown | 60 (5.8%) | 2,199 (6.5%) |
Admission typea | ||
Elective | 205 (19.9%) | 5,872 (17.5%) |
Emergency | 613 (59.6%) | 19,660 (58.6%) |
Newborn | 9 (0.9%) | 37 (0.1%) |
Trauma center | 3 (0.3%) | 279 (0.8%) |
Urgent | 192 (18.7%) | 7,573 (22.6%) |
Unknown | 6 (0.6%) | 130 (0.4%) |
After covariate adjustment for baseline measurements significantly related to each outcome, average daily post occlusion costs were estimated to be $317 lower for alteplase recipients than for patients who received catheter replacement ($317; 95% confidence interval [CI]: $238‐$392; P<0.0001) (Table 3). Average adjusted total post occlusion costs were $1419 lower for alteplase recipients than for patients who received catheter replacement ($1418; 95% CI: $307‐$2458; P=0.012).
CVC Replace Only, n=1,028 | Alteplase Only, n=33,551 | |
---|---|---|
| ||
30‐day readmission | 24.6% | 23.7% |
90‐day readmission | 35.1% | 33.9% |
Preocclusion | ||
Mean (SD) length of stay, days | 3.8 (6.7) | 7.3 (6.9) |
Mean (SD) total cost | $10,485 ($29,088) | $18,546 ($22,658) |
Mean (SD) cost per day | $2,876 ($3,046) | $2,637 ($1,783) |
Postocclusion | ||
Mean (SD) length of stay, days | 8.8 (11.0) | 8.8 (10.0) |
Mean (SD) total cost | $18,714 ($32,189) | $16,765 ($29,966) |
Mean (SD) cost per day | $2,146 ($2,995) | $2,058 ($6,585) |
Contributing to the lower cost were certain revenue‐center specific costs (Table 4). Total room and board costs were different between the alteplase and catheter‐replacement groups in both the pre‐ and postocclusion periods; this was related to the difference between the 2 comparison groups in postocclusion LOS of about 0.3 days (Table 5). However, the differences favored alteplase use over catheter replacement. Cardiology/electrocardiography costs were lower for catheter replacement in the preocclusion period but lower for alteplase use in the postocclusion period. Emergency department costs were higher for catheter replacement in both periods, as were respiratory costs in the same manner. Additionally, costs for laboratory tests, nursing, operating room/surgery, pharmacy, radiology, supplies, and ICU room and board were lower in the preocclusion period but higher in the postocclusion period for catheter‐replacement patients. It was unclear why the pharmacy costs after catheter replacement would have increased for catheter‐replacement patients in contrast to the decrease for alteplase‐treated patients, but because this occurred at an average daily basis as well, it appeared that catheter‐replacement patients may have received additional medications. Average adjusted postocclusion LOS was similar for alteplase and catheter‐replacement recipients (P=0.24), suggesting that decreased total costs were due to reasons other than shorter LOS.
Preocclusiona | Postocclusiona | |||
---|---|---|---|---|
CVC Replacement Only, n=1,028 | Alteplase Only, n=33,551 | CVC Replacement Only, n=1,028 | Alteplase Onlyn=33,551 | |
| ||||
Total room and board cost | ||||
Mean (SD) total cost | $4,380 ($9,545) | $8,535 ($10,175)b | $8,394 ($14,393) | $8,437 ($18,341)b |
Mean (SD) cost per day | $693 ($734) | $1,097 ($724)b | $751 ($536) | $983 ($3,250) |
Cardiology/ECG cost | ||||
Mean (SD) total cost | $82 ($806) | $154 ($605)b | $124 ($540) | $107 ($735)b |
Mean (SD) cost per day | $17 ($96) | $26 ($131)b | $17 ($93) | $19 ($217)b |
Emergency department cost | ||||
Mean (SD) total cost | $10 ($91) | $36 ($284)b | $10 ($67) | $12 ($195) |
Mean (SD) cost per day | $4 ($32) | $8 ($65)b | $2 ($19) | $6 ($76) |
Laboratory cost | ||||
Mean (SD) total cost | $864 ($2,538) | $1,425 ($3,622)b | $1,471 ($5,614) | $1,175 ($3,961) |
Mean (SD) cost per day | $140 ($314) | $180 ($269)b | $139 ($313) | $142 ($465)b |
Nursing Cost | ||||
Mean (SD) total cost | $218 ($1,497) | $224 ($2,364)b | $432 ($2,538) | $231 ($2,785) |
Mean (SD) cost per day | $39 ($166) | $24 ($127)b | $35 ($140) | $21 ($112) |
OR/surgery cost | ||||
Mean (SD) total cost | $902 ($4,743) | $1,602 ($3,597)b | $1,437 ($3,029) | $847 ($2,701)b |
Mean (SD) cost per day | $207 ($495) | $267 ($513)b | $302 ($646) | $130 ($827)b |
Pharmacy cost | ||||
Mean (SD) total cost | $2,085 ($20,338) | $3,014 ($6,408)b | $3,200 ($16,396) | $2,914 ($8,383)b |
Mean (SD) cost per day | $263 ($1,509) | $368 ($583)b | $362 ($2,427) | $347 ($853)b |
Radiology cost | ||||
Mean (SD) total cost | $470 ($869) | $782 ($1,031)b | $731 ($1,160) | $505 ($1,550)b |
Mean (SD) cost per day | $133 ($362) | $130 ($189)b | $144 ($293) | $83 ($469)b |
Respiratory cost | ||||
Mean (SD) total cost | $391 ($1,442) | $895 ($2,160)b | $673 ($2,209) | $783 ($2,297)b |
Mean (SD) cost per day | $51 ($121) | $104 ($170)b | $61 ($115) | $81 ($280)b |
Supply cost | ||||
Mean (SD) total cost | $834 ($3,221) | $1,408 ($5,871)b | $1,636 ($7,250) | $1,117 ($4,477)b |
Mean (SD) cost per day | $208 ($1,244) | $211 ($789)b | $264 ($871) | $165 ($1,529)b |
Other therapy cost | ||||
Mean (SD) total cost | $179 ($702) | $355 ($815)b | $436 ($837) | $509 ($1,263)b |
Mean (SD) cost per day | $30 ($81) | $46 ($98)b | $51 ($106) | $66 ($481)b |
Other departments cost | ||||
Mean (SD) total cost | $26 ($710) | $1 ($36) | $74 ($1,127) | $3 ($144) b |
Mean (SD) cost per day | $3 ($56) | $0 ($5) | $6 ($86) | $0 ($13)b |
Fees cost | ||||
Mean (SD) total cost | $38 ($370) | $82 ($969)b | $67 ($340) | $86 ($2,704) |
Mean (SD) cost per day | $7 ($47) | $12 ($77)b | $12 ($120) | $12 ($843) |
Healthcare services cost | ||||
Mean (SD) total cost | $5 ($53) | $31 ($1,052)b | $29 ($515) | $35 ($1,162) |
Mean (SD) cost per day | $1 ($10) | $3 ($65)b | $2 ($11) | $3 ($54) |
ICU room and board cost | ||||
Mean (SD) total cost | $2,085 ($7,700) | $4,333 ($8,826)b | $3,158 ($10,767) | $2,884 ($15,863) |
Mean (SD) cost per day | $293 ($677) | $543 ($854)b | $222 ($512) | $323 ($2,330) |
Model | Parameter Estimate | Summary Statistic | Estimate (95% CI) |
---|---|---|---|
| |||
30‐day readmissiona | 0.0234 | Odds ratio | 1.048 (0.899 to 1.221) |
90‐day readmissionb | 0.0248 | Odds ratio | 1.051 (0.915 to 1.207) |
Postocclusion total costsc | 0.0842 | Mean differenced | $1,418.69 ($2,458.12 to $307.27)f |
Postocclusion total cost per daye | 0.1857 | Mean differenced | $317.20 ($392.24 to $238.22)f |
Post occlusion length of stayg | 0.0313 | Mean differenced | 0.299 (0.196 to 0.820) |
Unadjusted 30‐ and 90‐day readmission rates were 24.6% and 35.1% for CVC replacement and slightly lower at 23.7% and 33.9% for alteplase (Table 3), respectively. Odds of readmission after adjusting for patient and hospital factors were not significantly different at 30 days (odds ratio [OR]: 1.048, 95% CI: 0.899‐1.221; P=0.55) or at 90 days (OR: 1.051, 95% CI: 0.915‐1.207; P=0.48) (Table 5). Subgroup analyses for patients with a diagnosis of heart failure, myocardial infarction, and cancer revealed similar results.
DISCUSSION
The cost of healthcare in the United States has risen at an outstanding rate compared with other countries. Our percentage of gross national product spent on healthcare is on the order of 16% to 18%, almost twice as much as the next most industrialized country in terms of healthcare expenditure.[11] In the current era, finding opportunities to reduce healthcare costs without negatively impacting quality of care is the name of the game. Professional societies have come together under the campaign of Choosing Wisely: An Initiative of the ABIM (American Board of Internal Medicine) Foundation to help educate clinicians and patients on cost‐containment strategies.[12] Research that demonstrates opportunities to reduce cost will help healthcare providers choose wisely among diagnostic and therapeutic options for patients. Our study demonstrated that the use of a drug such as alteplase in clearing CVC catheter obstruction was significantly less costly to the hospital than catheter replacement.
Cathflo Activase (alteplase: Genentech, South San Francisco, CA), the only FDA‐approved thrombolytic for the restoration of central venous catheter function, is the current standard treatment for catheter occlusions in the United States. A dose of 2 mg in 2 mL is instilled in patients weighing 30 kg or 110% of the internal lumen volume of the catheter not to exceed 2 mg in 2 mL for those patients weighing <30 kg. Haire et al. showed that a 2‐mg dose of alteplase was more effective than urokinase (5000 IU) for treating radiographically proven thrombotic occlusion of a CVC after a dwell time of 120 minutes.[13] In the Cardiovascular thrombolytic used to Open Occluded Lines (COOL) trial, one 2‐mg dose of alteplase cleared the catheter occlusion after 120 minutes in 74% of patients, compared with only 17% of patients who received a placebo. Studies have confirmed the safety and efficacy of alteplase administered at various time intervals in different long‐term catheters, including peripherally inserted central catheters, with major hemorrhage reported in 0.3% of patients.[14, 15, 16]
Adding to the knowledge of patient outcomes from clinical studies, many health outcomes studies have demonstrated benefit in cost containment through decreasing LOS, which one can argue is just shifting the cost to an earlier part of the stay. Even though this is highly beneficial, it does not address the core resource utilization within the hospital. Our study found its cost benefit not in the LOS, but in decreasing core resource utilization such as radiology, lab, nursing, and supplies. If patients are admitted for a noncardiovascular condition and have CVC occlusion, using alteplase to clear the CVC occlusion along with implementing strategies to manage the underlying disease to reduce the LOS becomes a powerful opportunity to impact cost. Among patients who may come to the hospital for just the CVC occlusion, the LOS should be short. There may be no significant opportunity to reduce the LOS in those cases, but opportunities to decrease core hospital resource utilization with alteplase make this approach beneficial if the patient can tolerate it.
Limitations of the study include the retrospective and administrative nature of the database used, which is unable to provide certain clinical measures as would be available at the patient's bedside when treatment choices are being made. Had they been available, we might have included them in our assessment of whether patients who underwent CVC replacement were significantly different from those who received alteplase. In addition, not all hospitals in the database had charge masters that facilitated identification of CVC replacements or reinsertions, requiring the use of CPT‐4 codes and evidence of new CVCs being placed or inserted. Certain patients were excluded if there was conflicting information about whether the CVC was new within the hospital stay or dwelling in the patient prior to admission. Also, dialysis patients were excluded because they were not part of any approved indication for alteplase 2 mg, and this group is particularly prone to catheter obstruction. As such, they represent more complicated cases than the norm; this exclusion may have limited the overall generalizability of the study. The study also relied on charge master (billing) data to identify the use of alteplase and other treatments, where there is the potential, albeit minimal, for inaccuracies in the data. Of greater importance, the study relied on ICD‐9 coding to identify comorbid conditions, and as in other studies using similar data sources, such methods are subject to coding errors and omissions. However, many of the listed limitations above were not thought to be different between the comparison groups or more problematic for this study than for other studies based on similar data sources.
CONCLUSION
Among patients treated for an occluded CVC, alteplase‐treated patients had lower daily postocclusion costs and lower total postocclusion costs than patients who received catheter replacement. Differences in costs did not appear to be driven by differences in postocclusion LOS. Readmissions at 30‐ and 90‐day periods were found to be similar between alteplase recipients and catheter‐replacement patients.
Acknowledgements
The authors thank W. Kenne Mountford for his editorial assistance with a prior version of the article and Dima Qato for assistance with the analyses. Additional editorial assistance was provided by Steve Melvin. This assistance was funded by Genentech, Inc.
Disclosures: This study was funded by Genentech, Inc. F. R. Ernst and C. Lipkin are employees of Premier, which was contracted by Genentech to conduct the study covered in this article. E. Chen is an employee of and holds stock in Genentech. D. Tayama is an employee of Genentech. A. N. Amin received research funding from Premier, which was contracted by Genentech to conduct the study covered in this article.
Long‐term central venous catheters (CVCs) facilitate care for patients with chronic illness by providing easy venous access for laboratory tests, administration of medication, and parenteral nutrition. However, several complications resulting from the use of CVCs, including sepsis, extravasation of infusions, and venous thrombosis, can increase associated morbidity and mortality. These complications can also interrupt and delay treatment for the underlying disease and thereby affect outcomes. One of the most common CVC complications is catheter occlusion.[1]
Catheter occlusion occurs in 14% to 36% of patients within 1 to 2 years of catheter placement.[2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8] A catheter occlusion can be partial or complete, and can occur secondary to a variety of mechanical problems, including an uncommon, but potentially life‐threatening, pinch‐off syndrome. Medication or parenteral nutrition can also cause occlusion, which can be acute or gradual, with increasingly sluggish flow through the catheter. Inappropriate concentrations or incompatible mixtures can cause medications to precipitate within the catheter lumen.
Occlusions are either thrombotic or nonthrombotic. One autopsy study of patients with a long‐term CVC found that a fibrin sheath encased the catheter tip in every case.[9] An occluded catheter may compromise patient care[9, 10]; it may cause cancellation or delay of procedures, it potentially interrupts administration of critical therapies including vesicants, it may result in risk of infection, and it potentially leads to catheter replacement. This can further complicate care, leading to increased length of stay (LOS) and hospital costs.
To better understand resource utilization, LOS, and cost implications of alteplase compared with catheter replacement, we conducted a preplanned, retrospective analysis of hospitalized patients captured between January 2006 and December 2011 in the database maintained by Premier. The Premier database is a large, US hospital‐based, service‐level, all‐payer, comparative database, with information collected primarily from nearly 600 geographically diverse, nonprofit, nongovernment community and teaching hospitals.
METHODS
Data Sources
The Premier database contains information on over 42 million hospital discharges (mean 5.5 million discharges/year)one‐fifth of all US hospitalizationsfrom the year 2000 to the present. The database contains data from standard hospital discharge files, including patient demographic information and disease state. Patients can be tracked, with a unique identifier, across the inpatient and hospital‐based outpatient settings, as well as across visits. In addition to the data elements available in most of the standard hospital discharge files, the Premier database also contains a date‐stamped log of billed items, including procedures, medications, and laboratory, diagnostic, and therapeutic services at the individual patient level. Drug utilization information is available by day of stay and includes quantity, dosing, strength used, and cost.
The Premier database has been used extensively to benchmark hospital clinical and financial performance as well as by the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) for drug surveillance and by the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services to evaluate next‐generation payment models. Preliminary comparisons between patient and hospital characteristics for hospitals that submit data to Premier and those of the probability sample of hospitals and patients selected for the National Hospital Discharge Survey suggest that the patient populations are similar with regard to patient age, gender, LOS, mortality, primary discharge diagnosis, and primary procedure groups.
Patient Population
In this retrospective observational database analysis, inpatients of all ages were initially identified who were discharged from a hospital between January 1, 2006 and December 31, 2011 and whose records contained 1 or more International Classification of Diseases, 9th Revision, Clinical Modification (ICD‐9) procedural codes or Current Procedural Terminology (CPT‐4) codes signifying CVC placement. The catheter replacement group comprised patients having a catheter replacement during the hospitalization. The alteplase treatment group was identified through patient billing records and by computing the dose administered (2 mg) during the index hospitalization period. Healthcare Common Procedure Coding System J‐codes (J2996, alteplase recombinant injection 10 mg; J2997, alteplase recombinant 1 mg) were also evaluated during the analysis to supplement the search string identification. To account for and eliminate catheter replacement due to mechanical failure rather than occlusion, patients with ICD‐9 diagnosis code 996.1 for mechanical failure were excluded. Patients with an ICD‐9 diagnosis code for infection or who received antibiotics on the day of replacement were excluded as an additional way to narrow the study to patients with occlusion as the reason for catheter replacement. In addition, patients receiving kidney dialysis, a chronic condition prone to greater‐than‐usual risk of catheter occlusion, were excluded. When a patient had multiple hospital stays with CVC insertions or placement during the study period, the first hospitalization with insertions or placement was used in our analyses.
Of the CVC patient population (N=574,252), 36,680 patient discharges resulted in the need for CVC replacement, alteplase therapy, or both. Patients receiving both replacement and alteplase (N=144) were excluded from analysis, resulting in 33,551 patient discharges with alteplase and 1028 patient discharges with CVC replacement.
Outcome Measures
The main outcomes of interest were LOS and hospital costs after occlusion, and readmissions at 30 and 90 days. Secondary measures, as they were thought to play a role in influencing outcomes, included LOS and costs before occlusion, as well as departmental costs such as pharmacy, radiology, and days in the intensive care unit (ICU).
Statistical Analysis
Univariate descriptive statistics were used to characterize the patient population by patient, clinical, and hospital attributes. In addition, subgroup analyses were performed among patients with any cardiology diagnosis (using ICD‐9 diagnosis or procedure codes), heart failure, myocardial infarction, and cancer, which were potentially overlapping categories chosen prior to initiating the analyses. Data measured on a continuous scale were expressed as mean, standard deviation, range, and median. Categorical data were expressed as count/percentages in the categories. In addition, categorical costs were also examined before and after occlusion. Tables of results included P values comparing patients who received CVC replacement with those who received alteplase across all measures. The [2] tests were used to test for differences in categorical variables, and t tests were utilized for differences in continuous variables.
Multivariable regression modeling was conducted to better compare outcomes associated with catheter replacement versus alteplase treatment. Linear regression models were performed to evaluate hospital costs and LOS during the initial hospital discharge. Logistic regression models were performed to evaluate the odds of readmission at 30 and 90 days following discharge. All multivariable models controlled for factors found to be statistically significant in univariate analysis. The covariates varied by model, but generally included age, race, sex, cancer, 3M All Patient Refined Diagnosis Related Group risk of mortality and severity of illness, cerebrovascular disease, renal disease, payer, myocardial infarction, hemiplegia/paraplegia, chronic or acute diabetes, peripheral vascular disease, complication, admission source, admission type, congestive heart failure, dementia, metastatic solid tumor, rheumatic disease, peptic ulcer disease, chronic pulmonary disease, hospital teaching status, urban/rural location, US Census region, and number of hospital beds. Certain of these variables, such as 3M measures of severity and risk, as well as measures of LOS and costs before occlusion, were considered as ways to understand differences in risk of increased costs among patients. For each multivariable model, covariates eligible for inclusion in the models were selected using a backward selection method (logistic used stepwise) until all variables remaining in the model were significant at P0.2.
RESULTS
This study included 34,579 patients who first had a CVC insertion and then were treated for a CVC occlusion by receiving a replacement CVC (n=1028) or by receiving alteplase (2 mg) administration (n=33,551) during the same hospitalization (Table 1). Patients who received alteplase tended to be younger (6019 vs 6220 years old). More than 50% were at least 65 years of age. Twelve percent of alteplase patients were black, whereas 18.5% of catheter‐replacement patients were black.
Catheter Replacement, n=1,028 | Alteplase Treatment, n=33,551 | |
---|---|---|
| ||
Age group, ya | ||
Under 18 | 29 (2.8%) | 984 (2.9%) |
1834 | 84 (8.2%) | 2,479 (7.4%) |
3544 | 73 (7.1%) | 2,826 (8.4%) |
4554 | 116 (11.3%) | 5,217 (15.5%) |
5564 | 210 (20.4%) | 6,761 (20.1%) |
6574 | 203 (19.7%) | 6,741 (20.1%) |
75+ | 313 (30.4%) | 8,543 (25.5%) |
Mean (SD) | 62 (20) | 60 (19) |
Sex | ||
Female | 565 (55.0%) | 18,172 (54.2%) |
Male | 463 (45.0%) | 15,378 (45.8%) |
Unknown | 0 (0%) | 1 (0%) |
Race/ethnicitya | ||
Black | 190 (18.5%) | 4,057 (12.1%) |
Hispanic | 40 (3.9%) | 1,098 (3.3%) |
Other | 126 (12.3%) | 6,250 (18.6%) |
White | 672 (65.4%) | 22,146 (66.0%) |
Comorbid conditions | ||
Myocardial infarction | 96 (9.3%) | 3,746 (11.2%) |
Congestive heart failure | 258 (25.1%) | 8,210 (24.5%) |
Peripheral vascular disease | 104 (10.1%) | 3,451 (10.3%) |
Cerebrovascular disease | 115 (11.2%) | 3,528 (10.5%) |
Dementia | 33 (3.2%) | 838 (2.5%) |
Chronic pulmonary diseasea | 264 (25.7%) | 10,495 (31.3%) |
Rheumatic disease | 37 (3.6%) | 1,344 (4.0%) |
Peptic ulcer disease | 41 (4.0%) | 1,068 (3.2%) |
Mild liver diseasea | 94 (9.1%) | 2,392 (7.1%) |
Moderate/severe liver diseasea | 29 (2.8%) | 531 (1.6%) |
Acute diabetes | 255 (24.8%) | 9,185 (27.4%) |
Chronic diabetesa | 44 (4.3%) | 2,327 (6.9%) |
Hemiplegia paraplegia | 51 (5.0%) | 1,909 (5.7%) |
Renal diseasea | 209 (20.3%) | 5,351 (16.0%) |
Cancera | 207 (20.1%) | 5,685 (16.9%) |
Metastatic solid tumora | 100 (9.7%) | 2,441 (7.3%) |
AIDS/HIV | 4 (0.4%) | 244 (0.7%) |
3M APR‐DRG Severity of Illnessa | ||
1‐minor | 36 (3.5%) | 769 (2.3%) |
2‐moderate | 172 (16.7%) | 4,109 (12.2%) |
3‐major | 384 (37.3%) | 12,175 (36.3%) |
4‐extreme | 436 (42.4%) | 16,497 (49.2%) |
Unknown | 0 (0%) | 1 (0%) |
3M APR‐DRG Risk of Mortalitya | ||
1‐minor | 159 (15.5%) | 4,716 (14.1%) |
2‐moderate | 253 (24.6%) | 6,746 (20.1%) |
3‐major | 313 (30.4%) | 10,569 (31.5%) |
4‐mxtreme | 303 (29.5%) | 11,519 (34.3%) |
Unknown | 0 (0%) | 1 (0%) |
Alteplase patients were significantly more likely to have a diagnosis of chronic pulmonary disease, liver disease, renal disease, chronic diabetes (ie, diabetes with complications), and cancer. There was an equivalent number of urban and rural hospitals across the 2 groups of patients (Table 2); however, there were regional differences including a higher proportion of catheter‐replacement patients from the East North Central and Middle Atlantic areas and a lower proportion of catheter‐replacement patients from Mountain and Pacific states. Catheter‐replacement patients more frequently were treated in teaching hospitals and in hospitals of larger size.
Catheter Replacement, n=1,028 | Alteplase Treatment, n=33,551 | |
---|---|---|
| ||
Provider regiona | ||
New England | 28 (2.7%) | 976 (2.9%) |
Middle Atlantic | 227 (22.1%) | 1,944 (5.8%) |
South Atlantic | 247 (24.0%) | 8,047 (24.0%) |
East North Central | 153 (14.9%) | 3,015 (9.0%) |
East South Central | 14 (1.4%) | 1,345 (4.0%) |
West North Central | 98 (9.5%) | 3,590 (10.7%) |
West South Central | 112 (10.9%) | 5,096 (15.2%) |
Mountain | 48 (4.7%) | 3,339 (9.9%) |
Pacific | 94 (9.1%) | 6,083 (18.1%) |
Unknown | 7 (0.7%) | 116 (0.3%) |
Population served | ||
Rural | 56 (5.4%) | 1,838 (5.5%) |
Urban | 972 (94.6%) | 31,713 (94.5%) |
Teaching statusa | ||
Nonteaching | 431 (41.9%) | 18,598 (55.4%) |
Teaching | 597 (58.1%) | 14,953 (4.6%) |
Hospital size, no. of bedsa | ||
<100 | 4 (0.4%) | 475 (1.4%) |
100199 | 56 (5.4%) | 1,725 (5.1%) |
200299 | 124 (12.1%) | 5,907 (17.6%) |
300499 | 432 (42.0%) | 13,790 (41.1%) |
500+ | 412 (40.1%) | 11,654 (34.7%) |
Primary payora | ||
Commercial | 50 (4.9%) | 1,779 (5.3%) |
Managed care | 221 (21.5%) | 6,888 (20.5%) |
Medicaid | 132 (12.8%) | 4,146 (12.4%) |
Medicare | 572 (55.6%) | 17,226 (51.3%) |
Other government programs | 9 (0.9%) | 439 (1.3%) |
Any other payor | 44 (4.3%) | 3,073 (9.2%) |
Admission sourcea | ||
Emergency department | 424 (41.2%) | 12,741 (38.0%) |
Physician referral | 390 (37.9%) | 14,502 (43.2%) |
Transfer from another health facility | 154 (15.0%) | 4,109 (12.2%) |
Unknown | 60 (5.8%) | 2,199 (6.5%) |
Admission typea | ||
Elective | 205 (19.9%) | 5,872 (17.5%) |
Emergency | 613 (59.6%) | 19,660 (58.6%) |
Newborn | 9 (0.9%) | 37 (0.1%) |
Trauma center | 3 (0.3%) | 279 (0.8%) |
Urgent | 192 (18.7%) | 7,573 (22.6%) |
Unknown | 6 (0.6%) | 130 (0.4%) |
After covariate adjustment for baseline measurements significantly related to each outcome, average daily post occlusion costs were estimated to be $317 lower for alteplase recipients than for patients who received catheter replacement ($317; 95% confidence interval [CI]: $238‐$392; P<0.0001) (Table 3). Average adjusted total post occlusion costs were $1419 lower for alteplase recipients than for patients who received catheter replacement ($1418; 95% CI: $307‐$2458; P=0.012).
CVC Replace Only, n=1,028 | Alteplase Only, n=33,551 | |
---|---|---|
| ||
30‐day readmission | 24.6% | 23.7% |
90‐day readmission | 35.1% | 33.9% |
Preocclusion | ||
Mean (SD) length of stay, days | 3.8 (6.7) | 7.3 (6.9) |
Mean (SD) total cost | $10,485 ($29,088) | $18,546 ($22,658) |
Mean (SD) cost per day | $2,876 ($3,046) | $2,637 ($1,783) |
Postocclusion | ||
Mean (SD) length of stay, days | 8.8 (11.0) | 8.8 (10.0) |
Mean (SD) total cost | $18,714 ($32,189) | $16,765 ($29,966) |
Mean (SD) cost per day | $2,146 ($2,995) | $2,058 ($6,585) |
Contributing to the lower cost were certain revenue‐center specific costs (Table 4). Total room and board costs were different between the alteplase and catheter‐replacement groups in both the pre‐ and postocclusion periods; this was related to the difference between the 2 comparison groups in postocclusion LOS of about 0.3 days (Table 5). However, the differences favored alteplase use over catheter replacement. Cardiology/electrocardiography costs were lower for catheter replacement in the preocclusion period but lower for alteplase use in the postocclusion period. Emergency department costs were higher for catheter replacement in both periods, as were respiratory costs in the same manner. Additionally, costs for laboratory tests, nursing, operating room/surgery, pharmacy, radiology, supplies, and ICU room and board were lower in the preocclusion period but higher in the postocclusion period for catheter‐replacement patients. It was unclear why the pharmacy costs after catheter replacement would have increased for catheter‐replacement patients in contrast to the decrease for alteplase‐treated patients, but because this occurred at an average daily basis as well, it appeared that catheter‐replacement patients may have received additional medications. Average adjusted postocclusion LOS was similar for alteplase and catheter‐replacement recipients (P=0.24), suggesting that decreased total costs were due to reasons other than shorter LOS.
Preocclusiona | Postocclusiona | |||
---|---|---|---|---|
CVC Replacement Only, n=1,028 | Alteplase Only, n=33,551 | CVC Replacement Only, n=1,028 | Alteplase Onlyn=33,551 | |
| ||||
Total room and board cost | ||||
Mean (SD) total cost | $4,380 ($9,545) | $8,535 ($10,175)b | $8,394 ($14,393) | $8,437 ($18,341)b |
Mean (SD) cost per day | $693 ($734) | $1,097 ($724)b | $751 ($536) | $983 ($3,250) |
Cardiology/ECG cost | ||||
Mean (SD) total cost | $82 ($806) | $154 ($605)b | $124 ($540) | $107 ($735)b |
Mean (SD) cost per day | $17 ($96) | $26 ($131)b | $17 ($93) | $19 ($217)b |
Emergency department cost | ||||
Mean (SD) total cost | $10 ($91) | $36 ($284)b | $10 ($67) | $12 ($195) |
Mean (SD) cost per day | $4 ($32) | $8 ($65)b | $2 ($19) | $6 ($76) |
Laboratory cost | ||||
Mean (SD) total cost | $864 ($2,538) | $1,425 ($3,622)b | $1,471 ($5,614) | $1,175 ($3,961) |
Mean (SD) cost per day | $140 ($314) | $180 ($269)b | $139 ($313) | $142 ($465)b |
Nursing Cost | ||||
Mean (SD) total cost | $218 ($1,497) | $224 ($2,364)b | $432 ($2,538) | $231 ($2,785) |
Mean (SD) cost per day | $39 ($166) | $24 ($127)b | $35 ($140) | $21 ($112) |
OR/surgery cost | ||||
Mean (SD) total cost | $902 ($4,743) | $1,602 ($3,597)b | $1,437 ($3,029) | $847 ($2,701)b |
Mean (SD) cost per day | $207 ($495) | $267 ($513)b | $302 ($646) | $130 ($827)b |
Pharmacy cost | ||||
Mean (SD) total cost | $2,085 ($20,338) | $3,014 ($6,408)b | $3,200 ($16,396) | $2,914 ($8,383)b |
Mean (SD) cost per day | $263 ($1,509) | $368 ($583)b | $362 ($2,427) | $347 ($853)b |
Radiology cost | ||||
Mean (SD) total cost | $470 ($869) | $782 ($1,031)b | $731 ($1,160) | $505 ($1,550)b |
Mean (SD) cost per day | $133 ($362) | $130 ($189)b | $144 ($293) | $83 ($469)b |
Respiratory cost | ||||
Mean (SD) total cost | $391 ($1,442) | $895 ($2,160)b | $673 ($2,209) | $783 ($2,297)b |
Mean (SD) cost per day | $51 ($121) | $104 ($170)b | $61 ($115) | $81 ($280)b |
Supply cost | ||||
Mean (SD) total cost | $834 ($3,221) | $1,408 ($5,871)b | $1,636 ($7,250) | $1,117 ($4,477)b |
Mean (SD) cost per day | $208 ($1,244) | $211 ($789)b | $264 ($871) | $165 ($1,529)b |
Other therapy cost | ||||
Mean (SD) total cost | $179 ($702) | $355 ($815)b | $436 ($837) | $509 ($1,263)b |
Mean (SD) cost per day | $30 ($81) | $46 ($98)b | $51 ($106) | $66 ($481)b |
Other departments cost | ||||
Mean (SD) total cost | $26 ($710) | $1 ($36) | $74 ($1,127) | $3 ($144) b |
Mean (SD) cost per day | $3 ($56) | $0 ($5) | $6 ($86) | $0 ($13)b |
Fees cost | ||||
Mean (SD) total cost | $38 ($370) | $82 ($969)b | $67 ($340) | $86 ($2,704) |
Mean (SD) cost per day | $7 ($47) | $12 ($77)b | $12 ($120) | $12 ($843) |
Healthcare services cost | ||||
Mean (SD) total cost | $5 ($53) | $31 ($1,052)b | $29 ($515) | $35 ($1,162) |
Mean (SD) cost per day | $1 ($10) | $3 ($65)b | $2 ($11) | $3 ($54) |
ICU room and board cost | ||||
Mean (SD) total cost | $2,085 ($7,700) | $4,333 ($8,826)b | $3,158 ($10,767) | $2,884 ($15,863) |
Mean (SD) cost per day | $293 ($677) | $543 ($854)b | $222 ($512) | $323 ($2,330) |
Model | Parameter Estimate | Summary Statistic | Estimate (95% CI) |
---|---|---|---|
| |||
30‐day readmissiona | 0.0234 | Odds ratio | 1.048 (0.899 to 1.221) |
90‐day readmissionb | 0.0248 | Odds ratio | 1.051 (0.915 to 1.207) |
Postocclusion total costsc | 0.0842 | Mean differenced | $1,418.69 ($2,458.12 to $307.27)f |
Postocclusion total cost per daye | 0.1857 | Mean differenced | $317.20 ($392.24 to $238.22)f |
Post occlusion length of stayg | 0.0313 | Mean differenced | 0.299 (0.196 to 0.820) |
Unadjusted 30‐ and 90‐day readmission rates were 24.6% and 35.1% for CVC replacement and slightly lower at 23.7% and 33.9% for alteplase (Table 3), respectively. Odds of readmission after adjusting for patient and hospital factors were not significantly different at 30 days (odds ratio [OR]: 1.048, 95% CI: 0.899‐1.221; P=0.55) or at 90 days (OR: 1.051, 95% CI: 0.915‐1.207; P=0.48) (Table 5). Subgroup analyses for patients with a diagnosis of heart failure, myocardial infarction, and cancer revealed similar results.
DISCUSSION
The cost of healthcare in the United States has risen at an outstanding rate compared with other countries. Our percentage of gross national product spent on healthcare is on the order of 16% to 18%, almost twice as much as the next most industrialized country in terms of healthcare expenditure.[11] In the current era, finding opportunities to reduce healthcare costs without negatively impacting quality of care is the name of the game. Professional societies have come together under the campaign of Choosing Wisely: An Initiative of the ABIM (American Board of Internal Medicine) Foundation to help educate clinicians and patients on cost‐containment strategies.[12] Research that demonstrates opportunities to reduce cost will help healthcare providers choose wisely among diagnostic and therapeutic options for patients. Our study demonstrated that the use of a drug such as alteplase in clearing CVC catheter obstruction was significantly less costly to the hospital than catheter replacement.
Cathflo Activase (alteplase: Genentech, South San Francisco, CA), the only FDA‐approved thrombolytic for the restoration of central venous catheter function, is the current standard treatment for catheter occlusions in the United States. A dose of 2 mg in 2 mL is instilled in patients weighing 30 kg or 110% of the internal lumen volume of the catheter not to exceed 2 mg in 2 mL for those patients weighing <30 kg. Haire et al. showed that a 2‐mg dose of alteplase was more effective than urokinase (5000 IU) for treating radiographically proven thrombotic occlusion of a CVC after a dwell time of 120 minutes.[13] In the Cardiovascular thrombolytic used to Open Occluded Lines (COOL) trial, one 2‐mg dose of alteplase cleared the catheter occlusion after 120 minutes in 74% of patients, compared with only 17% of patients who received a placebo. Studies have confirmed the safety and efficacy of alteplase administered at various time intervals in different long‐term catheters, including peripherally inserted central catheters, with major hemorrhage reported in 0.3% of patients.[14, 15, 16]
Adding to the knowledge of patient outcomes from clinical studies, many health outcomes studies have demonstrated benefit in cost containment through decreasing LOS, which one can argue is just shifting the cost to an earlier part of the stay. Even though this is highly beneficial, it does not address the core resource utilization within the hospital. Our study found its cost benefit not in the LOS, but in decreasing core resource utilization such as radiology, lab, nursing, and supplies. If patients are admitted for a noncardiovascular condition and have CVC occlusion, using alteplase to clear the CVC occlusion along with implementing strategies to manage the underlying disease to reduce the LOS becomes a powerful opportunity to impact cost. Among patients who may come to the hospital for just the CVC occlusion, the LOS should be short. There may be no significant opportunity to reduce the LOS in those cases, but opportunities to decrease core hospital resource utilization with alteplase make this approach beneficial if the patient can tolerate it.
Limitations of the study include the retrospective and administrative nature of the database used, which is unable to provide certain clinical measures as would be available at the patient's bedside when treatment choices are being made. Had they been available, we might have included them in our assessment of whether patients who underwent CVC replacement were significantly different from those who received alteplase. In addition, not all hospitals in the database had charge masters that facilitated identification of CVC replacements or reinsertions, requiring the use of CPT‐4 codes and evidence of new CVCs being placed or inserted. Certain patients were excluded if there was conflicting information about whether the CVC was new within the hospital stay or dwelling in the patient prior to admission. Also, dialysis patients were excluded because they were not part of any approved indication for alteplase 2 mg, and this group is particularly prone to catheter obstruction. As such, they represent more complicated cases than the norm; this exclusion may have limited the overall generalizability of the study. The study also relied on charge master (billing) data to identify the use of alteplase and other treatments, where there is the potential, albeit minimal, for inaccuracies in the data. Of greater importance, the study relied on ICD‐9 coding to identify comorbid conditions, and as in other studies using similar data sources, such methods are subject to coding errors and omissions. However, many of the listed limitations above were not thought to be different between the comparison groups or more problematic for this study than for other studies based on similar data sources.
CONCLUSION
Among patients treated for an occluded CVC, alteplase‐treated patients had lower daily postocclusion costs and lower total postocclusion costs than patients who received catheter replacement. Differences in costs did not appear to be driven by differences in postocclusion LOS. Readmissions at 30‐ and 90‐day periods were found to be similar between alteplase recipients and catheter‐replacement patients.
Acknowledgements
The authors thank W. Kenne Mountford for his editorial assistance with a prior version of the article and Dima Qato for assistance with the analyses. Additional editorial assistance was provided by Steve Melvin. This assistance was funded by Genentech, Inc.
Disclosures: This study was funded by Genentech, Inc. F. R. Ernst and C. Lipkin are employees of Premier, which was contracted by Genentech to conduct the study covered in this article. E. Chen is an employee of and holds stock in Genentech. D. Tayama is an employee of Genentech. A. N. Amin received research funding from Premier, which was contracted by Genentech to conduct the study covered in this article.
- Management of occlusion and thrombosis associated with long‐term indwelling central venous catheters. Lancet. 2009;374:159–169. , , , , et al.
- Children's Oncology Group. Prophylactic urokinase in the management of long‐term venous access devices in children; a Children's Oncology Group study. J Clin Oncol. 2004;22:2718–2723. , , , , , ;
- Central venous catheter‐related complications in children with oncological/hematological diseases: an observational study of 418 devices. Ann Oncol. 1985;16:648–654. , , , et al.
- A cross‐sectional study evaluating post‐thrombotic syndrome in children. Thromb Res. 2003;111:227–233. , , , et al.
- Complications and management of implanted venous access catheters. J Clin Oncol. 1985;3:710–717. , , , .
- Local installation of small doses of streptokinase for treatment of thrombotic occlusions of long‐term access catheters. J Clin Oncol. 1983;1:572–573. .
- Are clinical signs accurate indicators of the cause of central venous catheter occlusion? J Parenter Enteral Nutr. 1995;19:75–79. , , .
- Mechanism and management of persistent withdrawal occlusion. Am Surg. 1988;54:326–328. , .
- Catheter‐related thrombosis in pediatrics. Pediatr Nurs. 2002;28:97–102, 105–106. .
- Reopen the pipeline. Nursing. 2005;35:54–61. .
- Chemotherapy extravasation: a consequence of fibrin sheath formation around venous access devices. Oncol Nurs Forum. 1995;22:675–680. , .
- Organisation for Economic Co‐operation and Development (OECD). Statistics. OECD Health Data 2010, June 2010. http://www.oecd.org/unitedstates/Briefing‐Note‐USA‐2013.pdf. Accessed May 8, 2014.
- ABIM Foundation. Choosing Wisely: An Initiative of the ABIM Foundation. (2013). Available at: http://www.choosingwisely.org. Accessed April 6, 2013.
- Urokinase versus recombinant tissue plasminogen activator in thrombosed central venous catheters: a double‐blinded, randomized trial. Thromb Haemost. 1994;72:543–547. , , , .
- Recombinant tissue plasminogen activator (alteplase) for restoration of flow in occluded central venous access devices: a double‐blind placebo‐controlled trial—the Cardiovascular Thrombolytic to Open Occluded Lines (COOL) efficacy trial. J Vasc Interv Radiol. 2001;12:951–955. , , , et al.
- Safety and efficacy of alteplase for restoring function in occluded central venous catheters: results of the cardiovascular thrombolytic to open occluded lines trial. J Clin Oncol. 2002;20:317–324. , , , et al.
- Alteplase for treatment of occluded peripherally inserted central catheters: safety and efficacy in 240 patients. J Vasc Interv Radiol. 2004;15:45–49. , , , .
- Management of occlusion and thrombosis associated with long‐term indwelling central venous catheters. Lancet. 2009;374:159–169. , , , , et al.
- Children's Oncology Group. Prophylactic urokinase in the management of long‐term venous access devices in children; a Children's Oncology Group study. J Clin Oncol. 2004;22:2718–2723. , , , , , ;
- Central venous catheter‐related complications in children with oncological/hematological diseases: an observational study of 418 devices. Ann Oncol. 1985;16:648–654. , , , et al.
- A cross‐sectional study evaluating post‐thrombotic syndrome in children. Thromb Res. 2003;111:227–233. , , , et al.
- Complications and management of implanted venous access catheters. J Clin Oncol. 1985;3:710–717. , , , .
- Local installation of small doses of streptokinase for treatment of thrombotic occlusions of long‐term access catheters. J Clin Oncol. 1983;1:572–573. .
- Are clinical signs accurate indicators of the cause of central venous catheter occlusion? J Parenter Enteral Nutr. 1995;19:75–79. , , .
- Mechanism and management of persistent withdrawal occlusion. Am Surg. 1988;54:326–328. , .
- Catheter‐related thrombosis in pediatrics. Pediatr Nurs. 2002;28:97–102, 105–106. .
- Reopen the pipeline. Nursing. 2005;35:54–61. .
- Chemotherapy extravasation: a consequence of fibrin sheath formation around venous access devices. Oncol Nurs Forum. 1995;22:675–680. , .
- Organisation for Economic Co‐operation and Development (OECD). Statistics. OECD Health Data 2010, June 2010. http://www.oecd.org/unitedstates/Briefing‐Note‐USA‐2013.pdf. Accessed May 8, 2014.
- ABIM Foundation. Choosing Wisely: An Initiative of the ABIM Foundation. (2013). Available at: http://www.choosingwisely.org. Accessed April 6, 2013.
- Urokinase versus recombinant tissue plasminogen activator in thrombosed central venous catheters: a double‐blinded, randomized trial. Thromb Haemost. 1994;72:543–547. , , , .
- Recombinant tissue plasminogen activator (alteplase) for restoration of flow in occluded central venous access devices: a double‐blind placebo‐controlled trial—the Cardiovascular Thrombolytic to Open Occluded Lines (COOL) efficacy trial. J Vasc Interv Radiol. 2001;12:951–955. , , , et al.
- Safety and efficacy of alteplase for restoring function in occluded central venous catheters: results of the cardiovascular thrombolytic to open occluded lines trial. J Clin Oncol. 2002;20:317–324. , , , et al.
- Alteplase for treatment of occluded peripherally inserted central catheters: safety and efficacy in 240 patients. J Vasc Interv Radiol. 2004;15:45–49. , , , .
Published 2014. The Authors Journal of Hospital Medicine published by Wiley Periodicals, Inc. on behalf of Society of Hospital Medicine