Improving Accuracy of Administrative Data for Perforated Appendicitis Classification

Martha Conley Ingram, Andrew Hu*, Ruth Lewit, Seyed Arshia Arshad, Amanda Witte, Olivia A. Keane, Goeto Dantes, Steven C. Mehl, Parker T. Evans, Matthew T. Santore, Eunice Y. Huang, Monica E. Lopez, Kuojen Tsao, Kyle Van Arendonk, Martin L. Blakely, Mehul V. Raval

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Introduction: Reliance on International Classification of Diseases, Tenth Revision, Clinical Modification (ICD-10-CM) diagnosis codes may misclassify perforated appendicitis with resultant research, fiscal, and public health implications. We aimed to improve the accuracy of administrative data for perforated appendicitis classification relying on ICD-10-CM codes from 2015 to 2018. Methods: We conducted a retrospective study of randomly sampled patients aged ≤18 years diagnosed with acute appendicitis from eight children's hospitals. Patients were identified using the Pediatric Health Information System, and true perforation status was determined by medical record review. We developed two algorithms by leveraging Pediatric Health Information System data elements and data mining (DM) approaches. The two developed algorithm performance was compared against algorithms that exclusively relied on ICD-10-CM codes using area under the curve and other measures. Results: Of 1051 clinically validated encounters that were included, 383 (36.4%) patients were identified to have perforated appendicitis. The two algorithms developed using DM approaches primarily leveraged ICD-10-CM codes and length of stay. DM-developed algorithms had a significantly higher accuracy than algorithms relying exclusively on ICD-10-CM (P value < 0.01): sensitivity and specificity for DM-developed algorithms were 0.86-0.88 and 0.95-0.97, respectively, which were overall higher than algorithms that relied on only ICD-10-CM. Conclusions: This study provides an algorithm that can improve the accuracy of perforated appendicitis classification using commonly available elements in administrative data. We recommend that this algorithm is used in future appendicitis classification to ensure valid reporting, hospital-level benchmarking, and fiscal or public health assessments.

Original languageEnglish (US)
Pages (from-to)120-128
Number of pages9
JournalJournal of Surgical Research
Volume299
DOIs
StatePublished - Jul 2024

Keywords

  • Administrative data
  • Coding accuracy
  • ICD-10 coding
  • Pediatric appendicits

ASJC Scopus subject areas

  • Surgery

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