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Incidence of hospital‐acquired venous thromboembolic codes in medical patients hospitalized in academic medical centers

Pulmonary embolism (PE) and deep venous thrombosis (DVT), historically referred to together as venous thromboembolism (VTE), are common, treatable, sometimes fatal, and potentially preventable medical problems.[1] Such thromboses can both precipitate a hospitalization as well as complicate it (either during or soon after discharge). Preventing such thrombosis as a complication of medical care has become a national imperative. Landmark studies such as Prophylaxis in Medical Patients With Enoxaparin (MEDENOX)[2] and Prospective Evaluation of Dalteparin Efficacy for Prevention of VTE in Immobilized Patients Trial (PREVENT)[3] demonstrated both a high incidence of thrombosis in a hospitalized high‐risk medical population (15% and 5% in the 2 trials' placebo arms, respectively) as well as significant relative risk reduction through venous thromboembolism pharmacoprophylaxis (VTEP)63% and 45%, respectively. The Joint Commission,[4] the Society of Hospital Medicine,[5] and the American College of Chest Physicians[6, 7] have thus all strived to ensure the appropriate provision of VTEP in order to reduce the morbidity and mortality associated with thrombosis in hospitalized patients, including those on medical services.

Ideally, the global success of these efforts would be assessed by measuring the rate of hospital‐associated VTE (potentially including superficial venous thrombosis [SVT], which, like upper‐extremity deep venous thrombosis [UE‐DVT], is commonly a central venous catheter [CVC]‐associated, or peripherally inserted central catheter [PICC]‐associated, complication)thrombosis acquired and diagnosed during either the index hospitalization (hospital‐acquired, or HA‐VTE/SVT) or up to 30 days postdischarge. Unfortunately, postdischarge VTE/SVT is difficult to measure because patients developing it may not present to the original hospital, or at all (eg, if they do not seek care, are treated as outpatients, or, in the most extreme case, die at home). In this context, despite being far less comprehensive, HA‐VTE/SVT is a useful subset of hospital‐associated VTE/SVT, for several reasons. First, the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) have mandated hospitals to qualify all medical diagnoses as present‐on‐admission (POA = Y) or not (POA = N) since 2008, such that all medical diagnoses coded POA = N can be considered hospital acquired.[8] Second, refinements made to the International Classification of Diseases, 9th Revision (ICD‐9) codes now allow differentiation of UE‐DVT and SVT from lower‐extremity (LE) DVT/PE, whereas the former were sometimes obscured by nonspecific coding.[9] Third, recent studies have shown that medical diagnoses administratively coded as HA‐VTE/SVT correlated well with HA‐VTE/SVT ascertained through chart review.[9, 10] Finally, previous work has estimated that approximately half of all hospital‐associated VTE are HA‐VTE and the other half are postdischarge VTE.[11] Thus, HA‐VTE, though comprising only approximately half of all hospital‐associated VTE, is often used as a surrogate for measuring the success of ongoing VTE prevention programs.[12]

Our study aimed to assess the incidence of HA‐VTE plus HA‐SVT in the era of mandatory POA coding and newer ICD‐9 codes for VTE.

METHODS

Setting and Cases

We conducted a retrospective analysis of discharges from the 83 academic medical centers belonging to the UHC (formerly, the University HealthSystem Consortium, https://www.uhc.edu)[13] between October 1, 2009 and March 31, 2011. UHC collects demographic, clinical, and billing data from these centers including medical diagnoses and procedures coded using the ICD‐9‐Clinical Modification (ICD‐9‐CM), a POA indicator for each diagnosis; UHC also collects data on medication use. This study was approved by the institutional review board at the University of California Davis.

Patients in our analysis were age 18 years and discharged with a medical medical severity diagnostic‐related group (MS‐DRG) code, hospitalized for 48 hours, and did not have a surgical or obstetric MS‐DRG code (except when assigned a surgical MS‐DRG code solely due to insertion of an inferior vena cava filter, with no other major procedures performed). Cases excluded discharges with a principal diagnosis of acute VTE/SVT (defined here as including PE, LE‐DVT, UE‐DVT, SVT, chronic VTE, and thrombosis not otherwise specified), as coding guidelines prohibit assigning a HA‐VTE as the principal diagnosis for the index hospitalization.[14]

Hospital‐Acquired Venous Thromboembolism or Superficial Venous Thrombosis

Cases were classified as having a HA‐VTE/SVT if there was 1 VTE/SVT coded in a secondary diagnosis position (other diagnosis) with a corresponding POA indicator equal to either N (not POA) or U (documentation insufficient to clarify whether VTE was POA or not). This usage corresponds to CMS guidelines and reimbursement policies for hospital‐acquired conditions.[15] Among cases with 1 HA‐VTE (or SVT), we assigned 1 HA‐VTE diagnosis using a hierarchy based on the highest level of clinical importance: first, PE; then LE‐DVT; then UE‐DVT; then SVT; then chronic VTE; then, finally, unspecified VTE. We subsequently excluded cases with primarily chronic VTE from our analysis because these were likely miscodes (ie, it is unclear how a chronic VTE could not be POA) and there were only 30 such cases. Cases with HA‐PE or HA‐LE DVT were analyzed separately as an important subset of HA‐VTE (plus SVT), because HA‐PE/LE‐DVT is both life‐threatening and theoretically preventable with VTEP.

Severity of Illness and Other Measures of Comorbidity

For each case we used proprietary software (3M Health Information Systems, Murray UT) to classify severity of illness (SOI). The SOI scale, based on physiologic derangement and organ system loss of function,[16] has 4 levels: minor, major, severe, and extreme. Defined within specific disease groups (All Patient Refined DRGs), it is often compared across diseases as well.[17] We also assessed whether patients had a cancer diagnosis, spent time in the intensive care unit (ICU), and died in the hospital.

Central Venous Catheter Use in Patients With Upper‐Extremity Deep Venous Thrombosis or Superficial Venous Thrombosis

Because UE‐DVT and SVT are frequently associated with a CVC or PICC, we assessed central venous catheterization among patients with an UE‐DVT or SVT of the cephalic, basilic, or antecubital veins using diagnosis codes for complications related to dialysis devices, implants, and grafts.

Pharmacologic Thromboprophylaxis

Pharmacy records of the subset of HA‐VTE/SVT cases with PE or LE‐DVT were analyzed to determine if VTEP was administered on hospital day 1 or 2, as per Joint Commission performance requirements.[4] Medications that met criteria as VTEP included unfractionated heparin, 5000 IU, given 2 or 3 a day; enoxaparin, 40 mg, given daily; dalteparin, 2500 or 5000 IU, given daily; fondaparinux, 2.5 mg, given daily; and warfarin. We could not reliably determine if VTEP was used throughout the entire hospitalization, or whether mechanical prophylaxis was used at all.

Statistical Analysis

This was a descriptive analysis to determine the incidence of HA‐VTE/SVT and describe the demographic and clinical characteristics of this population. We calculated means and standard deviations (SD) for continuous variables and proportions for binary variables (including HA‐VTE/SVT incidence). All comparisons between populations were performed as either 2‐tailed t tests or 2 analyses. All analysis was conducted using SAS software, version 9.2 (SAS Institute, Inc., Cary, NC).

RESULTS

For the 18‐month period between October 1, 2009, and March 31, 2011, across 83 UHC hospitals, there were 2,525,068 cases. Among these, 12,847 (0.51%) had 1 HA‐VTE/SVT coded. As per the clinical importance hierarchy described above, 2449 (19.1%) cases had at least a PE coded; 3848 (30%) had at least a LE‐DVT (but not a PE) coded; 2893 (22.5%) had at least an UE‐DVT coded; 3248 (25.3%) had at least an SVT coded; 30 had at least a chronic VTE coded; and 379 had at least a VTE coded with no specified location. Of those with SVT, 192 (5.8%) were LE‐SVT codes, whereas the rest were SVT/thrombophlebitis of the upper extremities or not otherwise specified. There were 11,882 (92.5%) hospitalizations with a single HA‐VTE/SVT code and an additional 965 (7.5%) with multiple codes, for a total of 13,749 HA‐VTE/SVT events (see Supporting Information, Table S1, in the online version of this article for more specific data for the individual ICD‐9 codes used to specify HA‐VTE events).

Compared with those who did not develop any HA‐VTE/SVT, patients with HA‐PE/LE‐DVT were more likely to be Caucasian (65% vs 58%, P < 0.001) and were older (age 62 vs 48 years, P < 0.001) and sicker (79.9% vs 44.9% with a severe or extreme SOI, P < 0.001). They also were more likely to have cancer, have longer lengths of stay, be more likely to stay in the ICU, and die in the hospital (P < 0.001 for all comparisons; Table 1).

Patients With No HA‐VTE Code and Patients With a HA‐PE/LE‐DVT Code (ICD‐9‐CM)
CharacteristicNo HA‐VTE, n = 2,512,221HA‐PE/LE DVT, n = 6,297aP Valueb
  • NOTE: Data are presented as n (%) or mean SD. Abbreviations: API, Asian or Pacific Islander; HA‐PE/LE DVT, hospital‐acquired pulmonary embolism or lower‐extremity deep venous thrombosis; HA‐VTE, hospital‐acquired venous thromboembolism; ICD‐9‐CM, International Classification of Diseases, Ninth Revision, Clinical Modification; ICU, intensive care unit; LMWH, low‐molecular‐weight heparin; SD, standard deviation; SOI, severity of illness.

  • The first 2 columns, no HA‐VTE and HA‐PE/LE DVT, were compared as noted in the third column. Data on upper‐extremity or superficial thrombosis are not shown in this table.

  • For all variables except age and length of stay, P values are calculated by 2; for age and length of stay, P value is calculated by rank‐sum test.

  • Prophylaxis with LMWH, fondaparinux, unfractionated heparin, or warfarin on the first or second day of hospitalization. Prophylaxis was not estimated in the population that did not develop a HA‐VTE.

Proportion of hospitalizations, %99.490.25 
Age, y48.2 27.162.5 20.0<0.001
Female sex1,347,219 (53.6)3,104 (49.3)<0.001
Race  <0.001
Caucasian1,455,215 (57.9)3,963 (64.7) 
Black600,991 (23.9)1,425 (23.3) 
Hispanic206,553 (8.2)263 (4.3) 
API59,560 (2.4)88 (1.4) 
Other189,902 (7.6)389 (6.4) 
Admission SOI  <0.001
Minor461,411 (18.4)181 (2.9) 
Major922,734 (36.7)1,081 (17.2) 
Severe880,542 (35.1)2,975 (47.2) 
Extreme247,244 (9.8)2,060 (32.7) 
Unknown290 (0.01)0 (0.0) 
Had an active diagnosis of cancer331,705 (13.2)2,162 (34.3)<0.001
Length of stay, d7.31 9.3118.7 19.5<0.001
Spent time in the ICU441,412 (17.6)3,011 (47.8)<0.001
Died in hospital57,954 (2.3)1,036 (16.5)<0.001
Received prophylaxiscc3,454 (54.9)c

Among cases with a code for UE‐DVT (22.5% of all patients with HA‐VTE), 74% were noted to also have a code for a CVC, as did 60% of cases with a HA‐SVT of the antecubital, basilic, or cephalic veins (71% of SVT events; see Supporting Information, Table S1, in the online version of this article).

Of those with HA‐PE/LE‐DVT, 54.9% received pharmacologic prophylaxis on hospital day 1 or 2 (mostly with low‐molecular‐weight heparin or unfractionated heparin).

DISCUSSION

In this study of medical patients admitted to academic medical centers throughout the United States, we found that HA‐VTE/SVT was coded in approximately 0.51% of discharges, and the incidence of HA‐PE/LE‐DVT was 0.25%. Patients with a HA‐PE/LE‐DVT code were, in general, older and sicker than those who did not develop VTE. We further found that close to half of all HA‐VTE/SVT occurred in the upper extremity, with the majority of these occurring in patients who had CVCs. Finally, the majority of patients diagnosed with HA‐PE/LE‐DVT were started on VTEP on the first or second hospital day.

The overall incidence of HA‐VTE/SVT we discovered corresponds well to other studies, even those with disparate populations. A single‐institution study found a HA‐VTE/SVT incidence of approximately 0.6% among hospitalized patients on medical and nonmedical services.[12] The study by Barba found a rate of 0.93%,[18] whereas the study by Lederle found a rate of approximately 1%.[19] Spyropolous found an HA‐VTE incidence of 0.55%.[11] Rothberg found a lower rate of 0.25% in his risk‐stratification study, though in the pre‐POA and preupdated code era.[20] Our findings extend and provide context for, in a much larger population, the results of these prior studies, and represent the first national examination of HA‐VTE/SVT in the setting of numerous quality‐improvement and other efforts to reduce hospital‐associated VTE.

The incidence of HA‐VTE/SVT codes we observed likely underestimates the incidence of hospital‐associated VTE/SVT by a factor of approximately 4, for 2 reasons. First, although VTE/SVT codes with a POA flag set to No are truly hospital‐acquired events on chart review approximately 75% of the time, and thus overestimate HA‐VTE/SVT, 25% of POA = Yes codes are actually HA‐VTE/SVT events on chart review, and therefore lead to underestimation of HA‐VTE/SVT.[9] Because VTE/SVT codes with a POA flag set to Yes outnumber those flagged No by 3 or 4 to 1, events mis‐flagged Yes contribute a much greater number of undercounted HA‐VTE/SVT, elevating the actual HA‐VTE/SVT event rate by a factor of approximately 2. Second, HA‐VTE events do not include hospital‐associated VTE events that are diagnosed after the index hospitalization. In the Spyropolous study, 45% of hospital‐associated VTE events occurred after discharge, so translating HA‐VTE/SVT events to hospital‐associated VTE/SVT events would again involve multiplying by a factor of 2.[11] Thus, the overall incidence of hospital‐associated VTE/SVT events in our sample may have been approximately 2% (0.51% 4), and the overall incidence of hospital‐associated PE or LE‐DVT events may have been approximately 1%, though there may be significant variation around these estimates given that individual institutions were themselves quite variable in their POA flag accuracy in our study.[9] There is additionally the possibility that hospitals may have deliberately left some VTE/SVT uncoded, but in the absence of financial incentives to do so for anything other than postsurgical VTE, and in the presence of penalties from CMS for undercoding, we believe this to be unlikely, at least at present.

Despite these upward extrapolations, the estimated incidence of hospital‐associated VTE/SVT in our study may seem low compared with that reported in the MEDENOX[2] and PREVENT studies.[3] Much of this discrepancy vanishes on closer examination. In the large randomized trials, patients were uniformly and routinely assessed for LE‐DVT using vascular ultrasound; in contrast, in our population of hospitalizations patients may have only had diagnostic studies done for signs or symptoms. Clinically apparent hospital‐associated VTE is less common than all hospital‐associated VTE, as it was even in PREVENT,[3] and increased surveillance may even be partially driving increased hospital‐associated VTE/SVT at some hospitals.[21] Our findings suggest that success or failure in preventing administratively coded, clinically apparent HA LE‐VTE/PE should be judged, broadly, against numbers in the range established in our study (eg, 0.25%), not the 5% or 15% of chart‐abstracted, aggressively ascertained (and sometimes clinically silent) hospital‐associated VTE in the large randomized controlled trials. That is, 0.25% is not an achievement, but rather the average, expected value.

Almost 25% of the observed HA‐VTE/SVTs coded were UE‐DVT, with roughly 75% of these being likely related to central venous catheterization (including those peripherally inserted). An additional 1/5 were upper‐extremity SVT of the antecubital, cephalic, and basilic veins, with the majority of these (60%) also listed as catheter‐related. Such thrombosis is best prevented by decreased use of central catheters or perhaps by using smaller‐caliber catheters.[22] It is unclear if VTEP can prevent such clots, though in cancer patients at least one recent trial seems promising.[23]

We found that patients with a coded HA‐PE/LE‐DVT were remarkably different from those not developing HA‐VTE/SVT. Patients with HA‐PE or HA‐LE‐DVT were older, sicker, more likely to have cancer, significantly more likely to spend time in the ICU, and much more likely to die in the hospital; risk factors for HA‐VTE overlap significantly with risk factors for death in the hospital. A small majority (55%) of patients in the HA‐PE/LE‐DVT group had actually received VTEP on at least day 1 or 2 of hospitalization. It may be the case that the dose of VTEP was insufficient to suppress clot formation in these patients, or that HA‐PE/LE‐DVT in patients with this degree of comorbidity is difficult to prevent.

There are a number of limitations to our study. We analyzed administrative codes, which underestimate hospital‐associated VTE/SVT events as noted above. This was a descriptive study, cross‐sectional across each hospitalization, and we were unable to draw any causal inference for differences in HA‐VTE/SVT incidence that might exist between subpopulations. We estimated VTEP from medication usage in just the first 2 days of hospitalization; we could not assess mechanical prophylaxis in this dataset; and we did not have any VTEP data for the first 2 days of hospitalization on the patients who did not develop a HA‐VTE/SVT, which made it impossible to compare the 2 populations on this measure. For those who did not receive VTEP, we were unable to obtain data regarding possible contraindications to VTEP, such as ongoing gastrointestinal or intracerebral hemorrhage. Additionally, our data are based on academic hospitals only and may not generalize to nonacademic settings. Extrapolating from HA‐VTE/SVT to hospital‐associated VTE/SVT may not be possible due to heterogeneity of clotting events and perhaps variability in whether patients would return to the hospital for all of them (eg, superficial or UE VTE may not result in readmission). Finally, it is unclear whether a switch to ICD Tenth Revision (ICD‐10) codes will impact our measured baseline in the coming year. The strengths of our analysis included stratification by type of HA‐VTE/SVT and our ability to assess the incidence of HA‐VTE/SVT in a large national population, and the provision of a baseline for VTE incidenceeasily usable by any individual hospital, network, or researcher with access to administrative datagoing forward.

In conclusion, among patients hospitalized in academic medical centers, HA‐VTE/SVT was coded in approximately 0.51% of patients with a medical illness staying >2 days, with approximately half of the events due to HA‐PE/LE‐DVT. Patients who developed HA‐PE/LE‐DVT were more acutely ill than those who did not, and VTE developed despite 55% of these patients receiving VTEP on day 1 or 2. Hospitals can reasonably treat the 0.25% figure as the baseline around which to assess their own performance in preventing HA‐PE/LE‐DVT, and can measure their own performance using administrative data. Further research is needed to determine how best to achieve further reductions in HA‐VTE/SVT through risk stratification and/or through other interventions.

Disclosures

Nothing to report.

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References
  1. Guyatt GH, Akl EA, Crowther M, Gutterman DD, Schuünemann HJ;American College of Chest Physicians AntithromboticTherapy and Prevention of Thrombosis Panel. Executive summary: Antithrombotic Therapy and Prevention of Thrombosis, 9th ed: American College of Chest Physicians Evidence‐Based Clinical Practice Guidelines [published corrections appear in Chest. 2012;141(4):1129 and 2012;142(6):1698]. Chest. 2012;141(2 suppl):7S–47S.
  2. Samama MM, Cohen AT, Darmon JY, et al;Prophylaxis in Medical Patients with Enoxaparin Study Group. A comparison of enoxaparin with placebo for the prevention of venous thromboembolism in acutely ill medical patients. N Engl J Med. 1999;341(11):793800.
  3. Leizorovicz A, Cohen AT, Turpie AG, Olsson CG, Vaitkus PT, Goldhaber SZ. Randomized, placebo‐controlled trial of dalteparin for the prevention of venous thromboembolism in acutely ill medical patients. Circulation. 2004;110(7):874879.
  4. The Joint Commission.Specifications Manual for National Hospital Inpatient Quality Measures. Available at: http://www.jointcommission.org/specifications_manual_for_national_hospital_inpatient_quality_measures.aspx. Accessed July 18, 2012.
  5. Maynard G, Stein J. Preventing Hospital‐Acquired Venous Thromboembolism: A Guide for Effective Quality Improvement. Prepared by the Society of Hospital Medicine. Rockville, MD: Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality; AHRQ Publication No. 08‐0075.
  6. Geerts WH, Pineo GF, Heit JA, et al. Prevention of venous thromboembolism: the Seventh ACCP Conference on Antithrombotic and Thrombolytic Therapy. Chest. 2004;126(3 suppl):338S400S.
  7. Kahn SR, Lim W, Dunn AS, et al. Prevention of VTE in nonsurgical patients: Antithrombotic Therapy and Prevention of Thrombosis, 9th ed: American College of Chest Physicians Evidence‐Based Clinical Practice Guidelines. Chest. 2012;141(2 suppl):e195Se226S.
  8. Centers for Medicare 46(6 part 1):19461962.
  9. Spyropoulos AC, Anderson FA, Fitzgerald G, et al. Predictive and associative models to identify hospitalized medical patients at risk for VTE. Chest. 2011;140(3):706714.
  10. Khanna R, Vittinghoff E, Maselli J, Auerbach A. Unintended consequences of a standard admission order set on venous thromboembolism prophylaxis and patient outcomes. J Gen Intern Med. 2012;27(3):318324.
  11. United Health Consortium Website. Available at: https://www.uhc.edu. Accessed March 8, 2012.
  12. ICD‐9‐CM Official Guidelines for Coding and Reporting. Available at: http://www.cdc.gov/nchs/data/icd9/icdguide10.pdf. Published 2010. Accessed June 4, 2013.
  13. Centers for Medicare 27(5):587612.
  14. Overview of Disease Severity Measures Disseminated with the Nationwide Inpatient Sample (NIS) and Kids' Inpatient Database (KID). Available at: http://www.hcup‐us.ahrq.gov/db/nation/nis/OverviewofSeveritySystems.pdf. Published December 9, 2005. Accessed June 4, 2013.
  15. Barba R, Zapatero A, Losa JE, et al. Venous thromboembolism in acutely ill hospitalized medical patients. Thromb Res. 2010;126(4):276279.
  16. Lederle FA, Zylla D, MacDonald R, Wilt TJ. Venous thromboembolism prophylaxis in hospitalized medical patients and those with stroke: a background review for an American College of Physicians Clinical Practice Guideline. Ann Intern Med. 2011;155(9):602615.
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  18. Bilimoria KY, Chung J, Ju MH, et al. Evaluation of surveillance bias and the validity of the venous thromboembolism quality measure. JAMA. 2013;310(14):14821489.
  19. Evans RS, Sharp JH, Linford LH, et al. Reduction of peripherally inserted central catheter‐associated DVT. Chest. 2013;143(3):627633.
  20. Lavau‐Denes S, Lacroix P, Maubon A, et al. Prophylaxis of catheter‐related deep vein thrombosis in cancer patients with low‐dose warfarin, low molecular weight heparin, or control: a randomized, controlled, phase III study. Cancer Chemother Pharmacol. 2013;72(1):6573.
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Pulmonary embolism (PE) and deep venous thrombosis (DVT), historically referred to together as venous thromboembolism (VTE), are common, treatable, sometimes fatal, and potentially preventable medical problems.[1] Such thromboses can both precipitate a hospitalization as well as complicate it (either during or soon after discharge). Preventing such thrombosis as a complication of medical care has become a national imperative. Landmark studies such as Prophylaxis in Medical Patients With Enoxaparin (MEDENOX)[2] and Prospective Evaluation of Dalteparin Efficacy for Prevention of VTE in Immobilized Patients Trial (PREVENT)[3] demonstrated both a high incidence of thrombosis in a hospitalized high‐risk medical population (15% and 5% in the 2 trials' placebo arms, respectively) as well as significant relative risk reduction through venous thromboembolism pharmacoprophylaxis (VTEP)63% and 45%, respectively. The Joint Commission,[4] the Society of Hospital Medicine,[5] and the American College of Chest Physicians[6, 7] have thus all strived to ensure the appropriate provision of VTEP in order to reduce the morbidity and mortality associated with thrombosis in hospitalized patients, including those on medical services.

Ideally, the global success of these efforts would be assessed by measuring the rate of hospital‐associated VTE (potentially including superficial venous thrombosis [SVT], which, like upper‐extremity deep venous thrombosis [UE‐DVT], is commonly a central venous catheter [CVC]‐associated, or peripherally inserted central catheter [PICC]‐associated, complication)thrombosis acquired and diagnosed during either the index hospitalization (hospital‐acquired, or HA‐VTE/SVT) or up to 30 days postdischarge. Unfortunately, postdischarge VTE/SVT is difficult to measure because patients developing it may not present to the original hospital, or at all (eg, if they do not seek care, are treated as outpatients, or, in the most extreme case, die at home). In this context, despite being far less comprehensive, HA‐VTE/SVT is a useful subset of hospital‐associated VTE/SVT, for several reasons. First, the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) have mandated hospitals to qualify all medical diagnoses as present‐on‐admission (POA = Y) or not (POA = N) since 2008, such that all medical diagnoses coded POA = N can be considered hospital acquired.[8] Second, refinements made to the International Classification of Diseases, 9th Revision (ICD‐9) codes now allow differentiation of UE‐DVT and SVT from lower‐extremity (LE) DVT/PE, whereas the former were sometimes obscured by nonspecific coding.[9] Third, recent studies have shown that medical diagnoses administratively coded as HA‐VTE/SVT correlated well with HA‐VTE/SVT ascertained through chart review.[9, 10] Finally, previous work has estimated that approximately half of all hospital‐associated VTE are HA‐VTE and the other half are postdischarge VTE.[11] Thus, HA‐VTE, though comprising only approximately half of all hospital‐associated VTE, is often used as a surrogate for measuring the success of ongoing VTE prevention programs.[12]

Our study aimed to assess the incidence of HA‐VTE plus HA‐SVT in the era of mandatory POA coding and newer ICD‐9 codes for VTE.

METHODS

Setting and Cases

We conducted a retrospective analysis of discharges from the 83 academic medical centers belonging to the UHC (formerly, the University HealthSystem Consortium, https://www.uhc.edu)[13] between October 1, 2009 and March 31, 2011. UHC collects demographic, clinical, and billing data from these centers including medical diagnoses and procedures coded using the ICD‐9‐Clinical Modification (ICD‐9‐CM), a POA indicator for each diagnosis; UHC also collects data on medication use. This study was approved by the institutional review board at the University of California Davis.

Patients in our analysis were age 18 years and discharged with a medical medical severity diagnostic‐related group (MS‐DRG) code, hospitalized for 48 hours, and did not have a surgical or obstetric MS‐DRG code (except when assigned a surgical MS‐DRG code solely due to insertion of an inferior vena cava filter, with no other major procedures performed). Cases excluded discharges with a principal diagnosis of acute VTE/SVT (defined here as including PE, LE‐DVT, UE‐DVT, SVT, chronic VTE, and thrombosis not otherwise specified), as coding guidelines prohibit assigning a HA‐VTE as the principal diagnosis for the index hospitalization.[14]

Hospital‐Acquired Venous Thromboembolism or Superficial Venous Thrombosis

Cases were classified as having a HA‐VTE/SVT if there was 1 VTE/SVT coded in a secondary diagnosis position (other diagnosis) with a corresponding POA indicator equal to either N (not POA) or U (documentation insufficient to clarify whether VTE was POA or not). This usage corresponds to CMS guidelines and reimbursement policies for hospital‐acquired conditions.[15] Among cases with 1 HA‐VTE (or SVT), we assigned 1 HA‐VTE diagnosis using a hierarchy based on the highest level of clinical importance: first, PE; then LE‐DVT; then UE‐DVT; then SVT; then chronic VTE; then, finally, unspecified VTE. We subsequently excluded cases with primarily chronic VTE from our analysis because these were likely miscodes (ie, it is unclear how a chronic VTE could not be POA) and there were only 30 such cases. Cases with HA‐PE or HA‐LE DVT were analyzed separately as an important subset of HA‐VTE (plus SVT), because HA‐PE/LE‐DVT is both life‐threatening and theoretically preventable with VTEP.

Severity of Illness and Other Measures of Comorbidity

For each case we used proprietary software (3M Health Information Systems, Murray UT) to classify severity of illness (SOI). The SOI scale, based on physiologic derangement and organ system loss of function,[16] has 4 levels: minor, major, severe, and extreme. Defined within specific disease groups (All Patient Refined DRGs), it is often compared across diseases as well.[17] We also assessed whether patients had a cancer diagnosis, spent time in the intensive care unit (ICU), and died in the hospital.

Central Venous Catheter Use in Patients With Upper‐Extremity Deep Venous Thrombosis or Superficial Venous Thrombosis

Because UE‐DVT and SVT are frequently associated with a CVC or PICC, we assessed central venous catheterization among patients with an UE‐DVT or SVT of the cephalic, basilic, or antecubital veins using diagnosis codes for complications related to dialysis devices, implants, and grafts.

Pharmacologic Thromboprophylaxis

Pharmacy records of the subset of HA‐VTE/SVT cases with PE or LE‐DVT were analyzed to determine if VTEP was administered on hospital day 1 or 2, as per Joint Commission performance requirements.[4] Medications that met criteria as VTEP included unfractionated heparin, 5000 IU, given 2 or 3 a day; enoxaparin, 40 mg, given daily; dalteparin, 2500 or 5000 IU, given daily; fondaparinux, 2.5 mg, given daily; and warfarin. We could not reliably determine if VTEP was used throughout the entire hospitalization, or whether mechanical prophylaxis was used at all.

Statistical Analysis

This was a descriptive analysis to determine the incidence of HA‐VTE/SVT and describe the demographic and clinical characteristics of this population. We calculated means and standard deviations (SD) for continuous variables and proportions for binary variables (including HA‐VTE/SVT incidence). All comparisons between populations were performed as either 2‐tailed t tests or 2 analyses. All analysis was conducted using SAS software, version 9.2 (SAS Institute, Inc., Cary, NC).

RESULTS

For the 18‐month period between October 1, 2009, and March 31, 2011, across 83 UHC hospitals, there were 2,525,068 cases. Among these, 12,847 (0.51%) had 1 HA‐VTE/SVT coded. As per the clinical importance hierarchy described above, 2449 (19.1%) cases had at least a PE coded; 3848 (30%) had at least a LE‐DVT (but not a PE) coded; 2893 (22.5%) had at least an UE‐DVT coded; 3248 (25.3%) had at least an SVT coded; 30 had at least a chronic VTE coded; and 379 had at least a VTE coded with no specified location. Of those with SVT, 192 (5.8%) were LE‐SVT codes, whereas the rest were SVT/thrombophlebitis of the upper extremities or not otherwise specified. There were 11,882 (92.5%) hospitalizations with a single HA‐VTE/SVT code and an additional 965 (7.5%) with multiple codes, for a total of 13,749 HA‐VTE/SVT events (see Supporting Information, Table S1, in the online version of this article for more specific data for the individual ICD‐9 codes used to specify HA‐VTE events).

Compared with those who did not develop any HA‐VTE/SVT, patients with HA‐PE/LE‐DVT were more likely to be Caucasian (65% vs 58%, P < 0.001) and were older (age 62 vs 48 years, P < 0.001) and sicker (79.9% vs 44.9% with a severe or extreme SOI, P < 0.001). They also were more likely to have cancer, have longer lengths of stay, be more likely to stay in the ICU, and die in the hospital (P < 0.001 for all comparisons; Table 1).

Patients With No HA‐VTE Code and Patients With a HA‐PE/LE‐DVT Code (ICD‐9‐CM)
CharacteristicNo HA‐VTE, n = 2,512,221HA‐PE/LE DVT, n = 6,297aP Valueb
  • NOTE: Data are presented as n (%) or mean SD. Abbreviations: API, Asian or Pacific Islander; HA‐PE/LE DVT, hospital‐acquired pulmonary embolism or lower‐extremity deep venous thrombosis; HA‐VTE, hospital‐acquired venous thromboembolism; ICD‐9‐CM, International Classification of Diseases, Ninth Revision, Clinical Modification; ICU, intensive care unit; LMWH, low‐molecular‐weight heparin; SD, standard deviation; SOI, severity of illness.

  • The first 2 columns, no HA‐VTE and HA‐PE/LE DVT, were compared as noted in the third column. Data on upper‐extremity or superficial thrombosis are not shown in this table.

  • For all variables except age and length of stay, P values are calculated by 2; for age and length of stay, P value is calculated by rank‐sum test.

  • Prophylaxis with LMWH, fondaparinux, unfractionated heparin, or warfarin on the first or second day of hospitalization. Prophylaxis was not estimated in the population that did not develop a HA‐VTE.

Proportion of hospitalizations, %99.490.25 
Age, y48.2 27.162.5 20.0<0.001
Female sex1,347,219 (53.6)3,104 (49.3)<0.001
Race  <0.001
Caucasian1,455,215 (57.9)3,963 (64.7) 
Black600,991 (23.9)1,425 (23.3) 
Hispanic206,553 (8.2)263 (4.3) 
API59,560 (2.4)88 (1.4) 
Other189,902 (7.6)389 (6.4) 
Admission SOI  <0.001
Minor461,411 (18.4)181 (2.9) 
Major922,734 (36.7)1,081 (17.2) 
Severe880,542 (35.1)2,975 (47.2) 
Extreme247,244 (9.8)2,060 (32.7) 
Unknown290 (0.01)0 (0.0) 
Had an active diagnosis of cancer331,705 (13.2)2,162 (34.3)<0.001
Length of stay, d7.31 9.3118.7 19.5<0.001
Spent time in the ICU441,412 (17.6)3,011 (47.8)<0.001
Died in hospital57,954 (2.3)1,036 (16.5)<0.001
Received prophylaxiscc3,454 (54.9)c

Among cases with a code for UE‐DVT (22.5% of all patients with HA‐VTE), 74% were noted to also have a code for a CVC, as did 60% of cases with a HA‐SVT of the antecubital, basilic, or cephalic veins (71% of SVT events; see Supporting Information, Table S1, in the online version of this article).

Of those with HA‐PE/LE‐DVT, 54.9% received pharmacologic prophylaxis on hospital day 1 or 2 (mostly with low‐molecular‐weight heparin or unfractionated heparin).

DISCUSSION

In this study of medical patients admitted to academic medical centers throughout the United States, we found that HA‐VTE/SVT was coded in approximately 0.51% of discharges, and the incidence of HA‐PE/LE‐DVT was 0.25%. Patients with a HA‐PE/LE‐DVT code were, in general, older and sicker than those who did not develop VTE. We further found that close to half of all HA‐VTE/SVT occurred in the upper extremity, with the majority of these occurring in patients who had CVCs. Finally, the majority of patients diagnosed with HA‐PE/LE‐DVT were started on VTEP on the first or second hospital day.

The overall incidence of HA‐VTE/SVT we discovered corresponds well to other studies, even those with disparate populations. A single‐institution study found a HA‐VTE/SVT incidence of approximately 0.6% among hospitalized patients on medical and nonmedical services.[12] The study by Barba found a rate of 0.93%,[18] whereas the study by Lederle found a rate of approximately 1%.[19] Spyropolous found an HA‐VTE incidence of 0.55%.[11] Rothberg found a lower rate of 0.25% in his risk‐stratification study, though in the pre‐POA and preupdated code era.[20] Our findings extend and provide context for, in a much larger population, the results of these prior studies, and represent the first national examination of HA‐VTE/SVT in the setting of numerous quality‐improvement and other efforts to reduce hospital‐associated VTE.

The incidence of HA‐VTE/SVT codes we observed likely underestimates the incidence of hospital‐associated VTE/SVT by a factor of approximately 4, for 2 reasons. First, although VTE/SVT codes with a POA flag set to No are truly hospital‐acquired events on chart review approximately 75% of the time, and thus overestimate HA‐VTE/SVT, 25% of POA = Yes codes are actually HA‐VTE/SVT events on chart review, and therefore lead to underestimation of HA‐VTE/SVT.[9] Because VTE/SVT codes with a POA flag set to Yes outnumber those flagged No by 3 or 4 to 1, events mis‐flagged Yes contribute a much greater number of undercounted HA‐VTE/SVT, elevating the actual HA‐VTE/SVT event rate by a factor of approximately 2. Second, HA‐VTE events do not include hospital‐associated VTE events that are diagnosed after the index hospitalization. In the Spyropolous study, 45% of hospital‐associated VTE events occurred after discharge, so translating HA‐VTE/SVT events to hospital‐associated VTE/SVT events would again involve multiplying by a factor of 2.[11] Thus, the overall incidence of hospital‐associated VTE/SVT events in our sample may have been approximately 2% (0.51% 4), and the overall incidence of hospital‐associated PE or LE‐DVT events may have been approximately 1%, though there may be significant variation around these estimates given that individual institutions were themselves quite variable in their POA flag accuracy in our study.[9] There is additionally the possibility that hospitals may have deliberately left some VTE/SVT uncoded, but in the absence of financial incentives to do so for anything other than postsurgical VTE, and in the presence of penalties from CMS for undercoding, we believe this to be unlikely, at least at present.

Despite these upward extrapolations, the estimated incidence of hospital‐associated VTE/SVT in our study may seem low compared with that reported in the MEDENOX[2] and PREVENT studies.[3] Much of this discrepancy vanishes on closer examination. In the large randomized trials, patients were uniformly and routinely assessed for LE‐DVT using vascular ultrasound; in contrast, in our population of hospitalizations patients may have only had diagnostic studies done for signs or symptoms. Clinically apparent hospital‐associated VTE is less common than all hospital‐associated VTE, as it was even in PREVENT,[3] and increased surveillance may even be partially driving increased hospital‐associated VTE/SVT at some hospitals.[21] Our findings suggest that success or failure in preventing administratively coded, clinically apparent HA LE‐VTE/PE should be judged, broadly, against numbers in the range established in our study (eg, 0.25%), not the 5% or 15% of chart‐abstracted, aggressively ascertained (and sometimes clinically silent) hospital‐associated VTE in the large randomized controlled trials. That is, 0.25% is not an achievement, but rather the average, expected value.

Almost 25% of the observed HA‐VTE/SVTs coded were UE‐DVT, with roughly 75% of these being likely related to central venous catheterization (including those peripherally inserted). An additional 1/5 were upper‐extremity SVT of the antecubital, cephalic, and basilic veins, with the majority of these (60%) also listed as catheter‐related. Such thrombosis is best prevented by decreased use of central catheters or perhaps by using smaller‐caliber catheters.[22] It is unclear if VTEP can prevent such clots, though in cancer patients at least one recent trial seems promising.[23]

We found that patients with a coded HA‐PE/LE‐DVT were remarkably different from those not developing HA‐VTE/SVT. Patients with HA‐PE or HA‐LE‐DVT were older, sicker, more likely to have cancer, significantly more likely to spend time in the ICU, and much more likely to die in the hospital; risk factors for HA‐VTE overlap significantly with risk factors for death in the hospital. A small majority (55%) of patients in the HA‐PE/LE‐DVT group had actually received VTEP on at least day 1 or 2 of hospitalization. It may be the case that the dose of VTEP was insufficient to suppress clot formation in these patients, or that HA‐PE/LE‐DVT in patients with this degree of comorbidity is difficult to prevent.

There are a number of limitations to our study. We analyzed administrative codes, which underestimate hospital‐associated VTE/SVT events as noted above. This was a descriptive study, cross‐sectional across each hospitalization, and we were unable to draw any causal inference for differences in HA‐VTE/SVT incidence that might exist between subpopulations. We estimated VTEP from medication usage in just the first 2 days of hospitalization; we could not assess mechanical prophylaxis in this dataset; and we did not have any VTEP data for the first 2 days of hospitalization on the patients who did not develop a HA‐VTE/SVT, which made it impossible to compare the 2 populations on this measure. For those who did not receive VTEP, we were unable to obtain data regarding possible contraindications to VTEP, such as ongoing gastrointestinal or intracerebral hemorrhage. Additionally, our data are based on academic hospitals only and may not generalize to nonacademic settings. Extrapolating from HA‐VTE/SVT to hospital‐associated VTE/SVT may not be possible due to heterogeneity of clotting events and perhaps variability in whether patients would return to the hospital for all of them (eg, superficial or UE VTE may not result in readmission). Finally, it is unclear whether a switch to ICD Tenth Revision (ICD‐10) codes will impact our measured baseline in the coming year. The strengths of our analysis included stratification by type of HA‐VTE/SVT and our ability to assess the incidence of HA‐VTE/SVT in a large national population, and the provision of a baseline for VTE incidenceeasily usable by any individual hospital, network, or researcher with access to administrative datagoing forward.

In conclusion, among patients hospitalized in academic medical centers, HA‐VTE/SVT was coded in approximately 0.51% of patients with a medical illness staying >2 days, with approximately half of the events due to HA‐PE/LE‐DVT. Patients who developed HA‐PE/LE‐DVT were more acutely ill than those who did not, and VTE developed despite 55% of these patients receiving VTEP on day 1 or 2. Hospitals can reasonably treat the 0.25% figure as the baseline around which to assess their own performance in preventing HA‐PE/LE‐DVT, and can measure their own performance using administrative data. Further research is needed to determine how best to achieve further reductions in HA‐VTE/SVT through risk stratification and/or through other interventions.

Disclosures

Nothing to report.

Pulmonary embolism (PE) and deep venous thrombosis (DVT), historically referred to together as venous thromboembolism (VTE), are common, treatable, sometimes fatal, and potentially preventable medical problems.[1] Such thromboses can both precipitate a hospitalization as well as complicate it (either during or soon after discharge). Preventing such thrombosis as a complication of medical care has become a national imperative. Landmark studies such as Prophylaxis in Medical Patients With Enoxaparin (MEDENOX)[2] and Prospective Evaluation of Dalteparin Efficacy for Prevention of VTE in Immobilized Patients Trial (PREVENT)[3] demonstrated both a high incidence of thrombosis in a hospitalized high‐risk medical population (15% and 5% in the 2 trials' placebo arms, respectively) as well as significant relative risk reduction through venous thromboembolism pharmacoprophylaxis (VTEP)63% and 45%, respectively. The Joint Commission,[4] the Society of Hospital Medicine,[5] and the American College of Chest Physicians[6, 7] have thus all strived to ensure the appropriate provision of VTEP in order to reduce the morbidity and mortality associated with thrombosis in hospitalized patients, including those on medical services.

Ideally, the global success of these efforts would be assessed by measuring the rate of hospital‐associated VTE (potentially including superficial venous thrombosis [SVT], which, like upper‐extremity deep venous thrombosis [UE‐DVT], is commonly a central venous catheter [CVC]‐associated, or peripherally inserted central catheter [PICC]‐associated, complication)thrombosis acquired and diagnosed during either the index hospitalization (hospital‐acquired, or HA‐VTE/SVT) or up to 30 days postdischarge. Unfortunately, postdischarge VTE/SVT is difficult to measure because patients developing it may not present to the original hospital, or at all (eg, if they do not seek care, are treated as outpatients, or, in the most extreme case, die at home). In this context, despite being far less comprehensive, HA‐VTE/SVT is a useful subset of hospital‐associated VTE/SVT, for several reasons. First, the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) have mandated hospitals to qualify all medical diagnoses as present‐on‐admission (POA = Y) or not (POA = N) since 2008, such that all medical diagnoses coded POA = N can be considered hospital acquired.[8] Second, refinements made to the International Classification of Diseases, 9th Revision (ICD‐9) codes now allow differentiation of UE‐DVT and SVT from lower‐extremity (LE) DVT/PE, whereas the former were sometimes obscured by nonspecific coding.[9] Third, recent studies have shown that medical diagnoses administratively coded as HA‐VTE/SVT correlated well with HA‐VTE/SVT ascertained through chart review.[9, 10] Finally, previous work has estimated that approximately half of all hospital‐associated VTE are HA‐VTE and the other half are postdischarge VTE.[11] Thus, HA‐VTE, though comprising only approximately half of all hospital‐associated VTE, is often used as a surrogate for measuring the success of ongoing VTE prevention programs.[12]

Our study aimed to assess the incidence of HA‐VTE plus HA‐SVT in the era of mandatory POA coding and newer ICD‐9 codes for VTE.

METHODS

Setting and Cases

We conducted a retrospective analysis of discharges from the 83 academic medical centers belonging to the UHC (formerly, the University HealthSystem Consortium, https://www.uhc.edu)[13] between October 1, 2009 and March 31, 2011. UHC collects demographic, clinical, and billing data from these centers including medical diagnoses and procedures coded using the ICD‐9‐Clinical Modification (ICD‐9‐CM), a POA indicator for each diagnosis; UHC also collects data on medication use. This study was approved by the institutional review board at the University of California Davis.

Patients in our analysis were age 18 years and discharged with a medical medical severity diagnostic‐related group (MS‐DRG) code, hospitalized for 48 hours, and did not have a surgical or obstetric MS‐DRG code (except when assigned a surgical MS‐DRG code solely due to insertion of an inferior vena cava filter, with no other major procedures performed). Cases excluded discharges with a principal diagnosis of acute VTE/SVT (defined here as including PE, LE‐DVT, UE‐DVT, SVT, chronic VTE, and thrombosis not otherwise specified), as coding guidelines prohibit assigning a HA‐VTE as the principal diagnosis for the index hospitalization.[14]

Hospital‐Acquired Venous Thromboembolism or Superficial Venous Thrombosis

Cases were classified as having a HA‐VTE/SVT if there was 1 VTE/SVT coded in a secondary diagnosis position (other diagnosis) with a corresponding POA indicator equal to either N (not POA) or U (documentation insufficient to clarify whether VTE was POA or not). This usage corresponds to CMS guidelines and reimbursement policies for hospital‐acquired conditions.[15] Among cases with 1 HA‐VTE (or SVT), we assigned 1 HA‐VTE diagnosis using a hierarchy based on the highest level of clinical importance: first, PE; then LE‐DVT; then UE‐DVT; then SVT; then chronic VTE; then, finally, unspecified VTE. We subsequently excluded cases with primarily chronic VTE from our analysis because these were likely miscodes (ie, it is unclear how a chronic VTE could not be POA) and there were only 30 such cases. Cases with HA‐PE or HA‐LE DVT were analyzed separately as an important subset of HA‐VTE (plus SVT), because HA‐PE/LE‐DVT is both life‐threatening and theoretically preventable with VTEP.

Severity of Illness and Other Measures of Comorbidity

For each case we used proprietary software (3M Health Information Systems, Murray UT) to classify severity of illness (SOI). The SOI scale, based on physiologic derangement and organ system loss of function,[16] has 4 levels: minor, major, severe, and extreme. Defined within specific disease groups (All Patient Refined DRGs), it is often compared across diseases as well.[17] We also assessed whether patients had a cancer diagnosis, spent time in the intensive care unit (ICU), and died in the hospital.

Central Venous Catheter Use in Patients With Upper‐Extremity Deep Venous Thrombosis or Superficial Venous Thrombosis

Because UE‐DVT and SVT are frequently associated with a CVC or PICC, we assessed central venous catheterization among patients with an UE‐DVT or SVT of the cephalic, basilic, or antecubital veins using diagnosis codes for complications related to dialysis devices, implants, and grafts.

Pharmacologic Thromboprophylaxis

Pharmacy records of the subset of HA‐VTE/SVT cases with PE or LE‐DVT were analyzed to determine if VTEP was administered on hospital day 1 or 2, as per Joint Commission performance requirements.[4] Medications that met criteria as VTEP included unfractionated heparin, 5000 IU, given 2 or 3 a day; enoxaparin, 40 mg, given daily; dalteparin, 2500 or 5000 IU, given daily; fondaparinux, 2.5 mg, given daily; and warfarin. We could not reliably determine if VTEP was used throughout the entire hospitalization, or whether mechanical prophylaxis was used at all.

Statistical Analysis

This was a descriptive analysis to determine the incidence of HA‐VTE/SVT and describe the demographic and clinical characteristics of this population. We calculated means and standard deviations (SD) for continuous variables and proportions for binary variables (including HA‐VTE/SVT incidence). All comparisons between populations were performed as either 2‐tailed t tests or 2 analyses. All analysis was conducted using SAS software, version 9.2 (SAS Institute, Inc., Cary, NC).

RESULTS

For the 18‐month period between October 1, 2009, and March 31, 2011, across 83 UHC hospitals, there were 2,525,068 cases. Among these, 12,847 (0.51%) had 1 HA‐VTE/SVT coded. As per the clinical importance hierarchy described above, 2449 (19.1%) cases had at least a PE coded; 3848 (30%) had at least a LE‐DVT (but not a PE) coded; 2893 (22.5%) had at least an UE‐DVT coded; 3248 (25.3%) had at least an SVT coded; 30 had at least a chronic VTE coded; and 379 had at least a VTE coded with no specified location. Of those with SVT, 192 (5.8%) were LE‐SVT codes, whereas the rest were SVT/thrombophlebitis of the upper extremities or not otherwise specified. There were 11,882 (92.5%) hospitalizations with a single HA‐VTE/SVT code and an additional 965 (7.5%) with multiple codes, for a total of 13,749 HA‐VTE/SVT events (see Supporting Information, Table S1, in the online version of this article for more specific data for the individual ICD‐9 codes used to specify HA‐VTE events).

Compared with those who did not develop any HA‐VTE/SVT, patients with HA‐PE/LE‐DVT were more likely to be Caucasian (65% vs 58%, P < 0.001) and were older (age 62 vs 48 years, P < 0.001) and sicker (79.9% vs 44.9% with a severe or extreme SOI, P < 0.001). They also were more likely to have cancer, have longer lengths of stay, be more likely to stay in the ICU, and die in the hospital (P < 0.001 for all comparisons; Table 1).

Patients With No HA‐VTE Code and Patients With a HA‐PE/LE‐DVT Code (ICD‐9‐CM)
CharacteristicNo HA‐VTE, n = 2,512,221HA‐PE/LE DVT, n = 6,297aP Valueb
  • NOTE: Data are presented as n (%) or mean SD. Abbreviations: API, Asian or Pacific Islander; HA‐PE/LE DVT, hospital‐acquired pulmonary embolism or lower‐extremity deep venous thrombosis; HA‐VTE, hospital‐acquired venous thromboembolism; ICD‐9‐CM, International Classification of Diseases, Ninth Revision, Clinical Modification; ICU, intensive care unit; LMWH, low‐molecular‐weight heparin; SD, standard deviation; SOI, severity of illness.

  • The first 2 columns, no HA‐VTE and HA‐PE/LE DVT, were compared as noted in the third column. Data on upper‐extremity or superficial thrombosis are not shown in this table.

  • For all variables except age and length of stay, P values are calculated by 2; for age and length of stay, P value is calculated by rank‐sum test.

  • Prophylaxis with LMWH, fondaparinux, unfractionated heparin, or warfarin on the first or second day of hospitalization. Prophylaxis was not estimated in the population that did not develop a HA‐VTE.

Proportion of hospitalizations, %99.490.25 
Age, y48.2 27.162.5 20.0<0.001
Female sex1,347,219 (53.6)3,104 (49.3)<0.001
Race  <0.001
Caucasian1,455,215 (57.9)3,963 (64.7) 
Black600,991 (23.9)1,425 (23.3) 
Hispanic206,553 (8.2)263 (4.3) 
API59,560 (2.4)88 (1.4) 
Other189,902 (7.6)389 (6.4) 
Admission SOI  <0.001
Minor461,411 (18.4)181 (2.9) 
Major922,734 (36.7)1,081 (17.2) 
Severe880,542 (35.1)2,975 (47.2) 
Extreme247,244 (9.8)2,060 (32.7) 
Unknown290 (0.01)0 (0.0) 
Had an active diagnosis of cancer331,705 (13.2)2,162 (34.3)<0.001
Length of stay, d7.31 9.3118.7 19.5<0.001
Spent time in the ICU441,412 (17.6)3,011 (47.8)<0.001
Died in hospital57,954 (2.3)1,036 (16.5)<0.001
Received prophylaxiscc3,454 (54.9)c

Among cases with a code for UE‐DVT (22.5% of all patients with HA‐VTE), 74% were noted to also have a code for a CVC, as did 60% of cases with a HA‐SVT of the antecubital, basilic, or cephalic veins (71% of SVT events; see Supporting Information, Table S1, in the online version of this article).

Of those with HA‐PE/LE‐DVT, 54.9% received pharmacologic prophylaxis on hospital day 1 or 2 (mostly with low‐molecular‐weight heparin or unfractionated heparin).

DISCUSSION

In this study of medical patients admitted to academic medical centers throughout the United States, we found that HA‐VTE/SVT was coded in approximately 0.51% of discharges, and the incidence of HA‐PE/LE‐DVT was 0.25%. Patients with a HA‐PE/LE‐DVT code were, in general, older and sicker than those who did not develop VTE. We further found that close to half of all HA‐VTE/SVT occurred in the upper extremity, with the majority of these occurring in patients who had CVCs. Finally, the majority of patients diagnosed with HA‐PE/LE‐DVT were started on VTEP on the first or second hospital day.

The overall incidence of HA‐VTE/SVT we discovered corresponds well to other studies, even those with disparate populations. A single‐institution study found a HA‐VTE/SVT incidence of approximately 0.6% among hospitalized patients on medical and nonmedical services.[12] The study by Barba found a rate of 0.93%,[18] whereas the study by Lederle found a rate of approximately 1%.[19] Spyropolous found an HA‐VTE incidence of 0.55%.[11] Rothberg found a lower rate of 0.25% in his risk‐stratification study, though in the pre‐POA and preupdated code era.[20] Our findings extend and provide context for, in a much larger population, the results of these prior studies, and represent the first national examination of HA‐VTE/SVT in the setting of numerous quality‐improvement and other efforts to reduce hospital‐associated VTE.

The incidence of HA‐VTE/SVT codes we observed likely underestimates the incidence of hospital‐associated VTE/SVT by a factor of approximately 4, for 2 reasons. First, although VTE/SVT codes with a POA flag set to No are truly hospital‐acquired events on chart review approximately 75% of the time, and thus overestimate HA‐VTE/SVT, 25% of POA = Yes codes are actually HA‐VTE/SVT events on chart review, and therefore lead to underestimation of HA‐VTE/SVT.[9] Because VTE/SVT codes with a POA flag set to Yes outnumber those flagged No by 3 or 4 to 1, events mis‐flagged Yes contribute a much greater number of undercounted HA‐VTE/SVT, elevating the actual HA‐VTE/SVT event rate by a factor of approximately 2. Second, HA‐VTE events do not include hospital‐associated VTE events that are diagnosed after the index hospitalization. In the Spyropolous study, 45% of hospital‐associated VTE events occurred after discharge, so translating HA‐VTE/SVT events to hospital‐associated VTE/SVT events would again involve multiplying by a factor of 2.[11] Thus, the overall incidence of hospital‐associated VTE/SVT events in our sample may have been approximately 2% (0.51% 4), and the overall incidence of hospital‐associated PE or LE‐DVT events may have been approximately 1%, though there may be significant variation around these estimates given that individual institutions were themselves quite variable in their POA flag accuracy in our study.[9] There is additionally the possibility that hospitals may have deliberately left some VTE/SVT uncoded, but in the absence of financial incentives to do so for anything other than postsurgical VTE, and in the presence of penalties from CMS for undercoding, we believe this to be unlikely, at least at present.

Despite these upward extrapolations, the estimated incidence of hospital‐associated VTE/SVT in our study may seem low compared with that reported in the MEDENOX[2] and PREVENT studies.[3] Much of this discrepancy vanishes on closer examination. In the large randomized trials, patients were uniformly and routinely assessed for LE‐DVT using vascular ultrasound; in contrast, in our population of hospitalizations patients may have only had diagnostic studies done for signs or symptoms. Clinically apparent hospital‐associated VTE is less common than all hospital‐associated VTE, as it was even in PREVENT,[3] and increased surveillance may even be partially driving increased hospital‐associated VTE/SVT at some hospitals.[21] Our findings suggest that success or failure in preventing administratively coded, clinically apparent HA LE‐VTE/PE should be judged, broadly, against numbers in the range established in our study (eg, 0.25%), not the 5% or 15% of chart‐abstracted, aggressively ascertained (and sometimes clinically silent) hospital‐associated VTE in the large randomized controlled trials. That is, 0.25% is not an achievement, but rather the average, expected value.

Almost 25% of the observed HA‐VTE/SVTs coded were UE‐DVT, with roughly 75% of these being likely related to central venous catheterization (including those peripherally inserted). An additional 1/5 were upper‐extremity SVT of the antecubital, cephalic, and basilic veins, with the majority of these (60%) also listed as catheter‐related. Such thrombosis is best prevented by decreased use of central catheters or perhaps by using smaller‐caliber catheters.[22] It is unclear if VTEP can prevent such clots, though in cancer patients at least one recent trial seems promising.[23]

We found that patients with a coded HA‐PE/LE‐DVT were remarkably different from those not developing HA‐VTE/SVT. Patients with HA‐PE or HA‐LE‐DVT were older, sicker, more likely to have cancer, significantly more likely to spend time in the ICU, and much more likely to die in the hospital; risk factors for HA‐VTE overlap significantly with risk factors for death in the hospital. A small majority (55%) of patients in the HA‐PE/LE‐DVT group had actually received VTEP on at least day 1 or 2 of hospitalization. It may be the case that the dose of VTEP was insufficient to suppress clot formation in these patients, or that HA‐PE/LE‐DVT in patients with this degree of comorbidity is difficult to prevent.

There are a number of limitations to our study. We analyzed administrative codes, which underestimate hospital‐associated VTE/SVT events as noted above. This was a descriptive study, cross‐sectional across each hospitalization, and we were unable to draw any causal inference for differences in HA‐VTE/SVT incidence that might exist between subpopulations. We estimated VTEP from medication usage in just the first 2 days of hospitalization; we could not assess mechanical prophylaxis in this dataset; and we did not have any VTEP data for the first 2 days of hospitalization on the patients who did not develop a HA‐VTE/SVT, which made it impossible to compare the 2 populations on this measure. For those who did not receive VTEP, we were unable to obtain data regarding possible contraindications to VTEP, such as ongoing gastrointestinal or intracerebral hemorrhage. Additionally, our data are based on academic hospitals only and may not generalize to nonacademic settings. Extrapolating from HA‐VTE/SVT to hospital‐associated VTE/SVT may not be possible due to heterogeneity of clotting events and perhaps variability in whether patients would return to the hospital for all of them (eg, superficial or UE VTE may not result in readmission). Finally, it is unclear whether a switch to ICD Tenth Revision (ICD‐10) codes will impact our measured baseline in the coming year. The strengths of our analysis included stratification by type of HA‐VTE/SVT and our ability to assess the incidence of HA‐VTE/SVT in a large national population, and the provision of a baseline for VTE incidenceeasily usable by any individual hospital, network, or researcher with access to administrative datagoing forward.

In conclusion, among patients hospitalized in academic medical centers, HA‐VTE/SVT was coded in approximately 0.51% of patients with a medical illness staying >2 days, with approximately half of the events due to HA‐PE/LE‐DVT. Patients who developed HA‐PE/LE‐DVT were more acutely ill than those who did not, and VTE developed despite 55% of these patients receiving VTEP on day 1 or 2. Hospitals can reasonably treat the 0.25% figure as the baseline around which to assess their own performance in preventing HA‐PE/LE‐DVT, and can measure their own performance using administrative data. Further research is needed to determine how best to achieve further reductions in HA‐VTE/SVT through risk stratification and/or through other interventions.

Disclosures

Nothing to report.

References
  1. Guyatt GH, Akl EA, Crowther M, Gutterman DD, Schuünemann HJ;American College of Chest Physicians AntithromboticTherapy and Prevention of Thrombosis Panel. Executive summary: Antithrombotic Therapy and Prevention of Thrombosis, 9th ed: American College of Chest Physicians Evidence‐Based Clinical Practice Guidelines [published corrections appear in Chest. 2012;141(4):1129 and 2012;142(6):1698]. Chest. 2012;141(2 suppl):7S–47S.
  2. Samama MM, Cohen AT, Darmon JY, et al;Prophylaxis in Medical Patients with Enoxaparin Study Group. A comparison of enoxaparin with placebo for the prevention of venous thromboembolism in acutely ill medical patients. N Engl J Med. 1999;341(11):793800.
  3. Leizorovicz A, Cohen AT, Turpie AG, Olsson CG, Vaitkus PT, Goldhaber SZ. Randomized, placebo‐controlled trial of dalteparin for the prevention of venous thromboembolism in acutely ill medical patients. Circulation. 2004;110(7):874879.
  4. The Joint Commission.Specifications Manual for National Hospital Inpatient Quality Measures. Available at: http://www.jointcommission.org/specifications_manual_for_national_hospital_inpatient_quality_measures.aspx. Accessed July 18, 2012.
  5. Maynard G, Stein J. Preventing Hospital‐Acquired Venous Thromboembolism: A Guide for Effective Quality Improvement. Prepared by the Society of Hospital Medicine. Rockville, MD: Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality; AHRQ Publication No. 08‐0075.
  6. Geerts WH, Pineo GF, Heit JA, et al. Prevention of venous thromboembolism: the Seventh ACCP Conference on Antithrombotic and Thrombolytic Therapy. Chest. 2004;126(3 suppl):338S400S.
  7. Kahn SR, Lim W, Dunn AS, et al. Prevention of VTE in nonsurgical patients: Antithrombotic Therapy and Prevention of Thrombosis, 9th ed: American College of Chest Physicians Evidence‐Based Clinical Practice Guidelines. Chest. 2012;141(2 suppl):e195Se226S.
  8. Centers for Medicare 46(6 part 1):19461962.
  9. Spyropoulos AC, Anderson FA, Fitzgerald G, et al. Predictive and associative models to identify hospitalized medical patients at risk for VTE. Chest. 2011;140(3):706714.
  10. Khanna R, Vittinghoff E, Maselli J, Auerbach A. Unintended consequences of a standard admission order set on venous thromboembolism prophylaxis and patient outcomes. J Gen Intern Med. 2012;27(3):318324.
  11. United Health Consortium Website. Available at: https://www.uhc.edu. Accessed March 8, 2012.
  12. ICD‐9‐CM Official Guidelines for Coding and Reporting. Available at: http://www.cdc.gov/nchs/data/icd9/icdguide10.pdf. Published 2010. Accessed June 4, 2013.
  13. Centers for Medicare 27(5):587612.
  14. Overview of Disease Severity Measures Disseminated with the Nationwide Inpatient Sample (NIS) and Kids' Inpatient Database (KID). Available at: http://www.hcup‐us.ahrq.gov/db/nation/nis/OverviewofSeveritySystems.pdf. Published December 9, 2005. Accessed June 4, 2013.
  15. Barba R, Zapatero A, Losa JE, et al. Venous thromboembolism in acutely ill hospitalized medical patients. Thromb Res. 2010;126(4):276279.
  16. Lederle FA, Zylla D, MacDonald R, Wilt TJ. Venous thromboembolism prophylaxis in hospitalized medical patients and those with stroke: a background review for an American College of Physicians Clinical Practice Guideline. Ann Intern Med. 2011;155(9):602615.
  17. Rothberg MB, Lindenauer PK, Lahti M, Pekow PS, Selker HP. Risk factor model to predict venous thromboembolism in hospitalized medical patients. J Hosp Med. 2011;6(4):202209.
  18. Bilimoria KY, Chung J, Ju MH, et al. Evaluation of surveillance bias and the validity of the venous thromboembolism quality measure. JAMA. 2013;310(14):14821489.
  19. Evans RS, Sharp JH, Linford LH, et al. Reduction of peripherally inserted central catheter‐associated DVT. Chest. 2013;143(3):627633.
  20. Lavau‐Denes S, Lacroix P, Maubon A, et al. Prophylaxis of catheter‐related deep vein thrombosis in cancer patients with low‐dose warfarin, low molecular weight heparin, or control: a randomized, controlled, phase III study. Cancer Chemother Pharmacol. 2013;72(1):6573.
References
  1. Guyatt GH, Akl EA, Crowther M, Gutterman DD, Schuünemann HJ;American College of Chest Physicians AntithromboticTherapy and Prevention of Thrombosis Panel. Executive summary: Antithrombotic Therapy and Prevention of Thrombosis, 9th ed: American College of Chest Physicians Evidence‐Based Clinical Practice Guidelines [published corrections appear in Chest. 2012;141(4):1129 and 2012;142(6):1698]. Chest. 2012;141(2 suppl):7S–47S.
  2. Samama MM, Cohen AT, Darmon JY, et al;Prophylaxis in Medical Patients with Enoxaparin Study Group. A comparison of enoxaparin with placebo for the prevention of venous thromboembolism in acutely ill medical patients. N Engl J Med. 1999;341(11):793800.
  3. Leizorovicz A, Cohen AT, Turpie AG, Olsson CG, Vaitkus PT, Goldhaber SZ. Randomized, placebo‐controlled trial of dalteparin for the prevention of venous thromboembolism in acutely ill medical patients. Circulation. 2004;110(7):874879.
  4. The Joint Commission.Specifications Manual for National Hospital Inpatient Quality Measures. Available at: http://www.jointcommission.org/specifications_manual_for_national_hospital_inpatient_quality_measures.aspx. Accessed July 18, 2012.
  5. Maynard G, Stein J. Preventing Hospital‐Acquired Venous Thromboembolism: A Guide for Effective Quality Improvement. Prepared by the Society of Hospital Medicine. Rockville, MD: Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality; AHRQ Publication No. 08‐0075.
  6. Geerts WH, Pineo GF, Heit JA, et al. Prevention of venous thromboembolism: the Seventh ACCP Conference on Antithrombotic and Thrombolytic Therapy. Chest. 2004;126(3 suppl):338S400S.
  7. Kahn SR, Lim W, Dunn AS, et al. Prevention of VTE in nonsurgical patients: Antithrombotic Therapy and Prevention of Thrombosis, 9th ed: American College of Chest Physicians Evidence‐Based Clinical Practice Guidelines. Chest. 2012;141(2 suppl):e195Se226S.
  8. Centers for Medicare 46(6 part 1):19461962.
  9. Spyropoulos AC, Anderson FA, Fitzgerald G, et al. Predictive and associative models to identify hospitalized medical patients at risk for VTE. Chest. 2011;140(3):706714.
  10. Khanna R, Vittinghoff E, Maselli J, Auerbach A. Unintended consequences of a standard admission order set on venous thromboembolism prophylaxis and patient outcomes. J Gen Intern Med. 2012;27(3):318324.
  11. United Health Consortium Website. Available at: https://www.uhc.edu. Accessed March 8, 2012.
  12. ICD‐9‐CM Official Guidelines for Coding and Reporting. Available at: http://www.cdc.gov/nchs/data/icd9/icdguide10.pdf. Published 2010. Accessed June 4, 2013.
  13. Centers for Medicare 27(5):587612.
  14. Overview of Disease Severity Measures Disseminated with the Nationwide Inpatient Sample (NIS) and Kids' Inpatient Database (KID). Available at: http://www.hcup‐us.ahrq.gov/db/nation/nis/OverviewofSeveritySystems.pdf. Published December 9, 2005. Accessed June 4, 2013.
  15. Barba R, Zapatero A, Losa JE, et al. Venous thromboembolism in acutely ill hospitalized medical patients. Thromb Res. 2010;126(4):276279.
  16. Lederle FA, Zylla D, MacDonald R, Wilt TJ. Venous thromboembolism prophylaxis in hospitalized medical patients and those with stroke: a background review for an American College of Physicians Clinical Practice Guideline. Ann Intern Med. 2011;155(9):602615.
  17. Rothberg MB, Lindenauer PK, Lahti M, Pekow PS, Selker HP. Risk factor model to predict venous thromboembolism in hospitalized medical patients. J Hosp Med. 2011;6(4):202209.
  18. Bilimoria KY, Chung J, Ju MH, et al. Evaluation of surveillance bias and the validity of the venous thromboembolism quality measure. JAMA. 2013;310(14):14821489.
  19. Evans RS, Sharp JH, Linford LH, et al. Reduction of peripherally inserted central catheter‐associated DVT. Chest. 2013;143(3):627633.
  20. Lavau‐Denes S, Lacroix P, Maubon A, et al. Prophylaxis of catheter‐related deep vein thrombosis in cancer patients with low‐dose warfarin, low molecular weight heparin, or control: a randomized, controlled, phase III study. Cancer Chemother Pharmacol. 2013;72(1):6573.
Issue
Journal of Hospital Medicine - 9(4)
Issue
Journal of Hospital Medicine - 9(4)
Page Number
221-225
Page Number
221-225
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Incidence of hospital‐acquired venous thromboembolic codes in medical patients hospitalized in academic medical centers
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Incidence of hospital‐acquired venous thromboembolic codes in medical patients hospitalized in academic medical centers
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Address for correspondence and reprint requests: Raman Khanna, MD, MAS, Assistant Clinical Professor of Medicine, University of California San Francisco, Department of Medicine, Division of Hospital Medicine, 533 Parnassus, U136, San Francisco, CA; Telephone: 415‐476‐4806; Fax: 415‐514‐2094; E‐mail: rkhanna@medicine.ucsf.edu.
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