Association of reintubation and hospital costs and its modification by postoperative surveillance: A multicenter retrospective cohort study

We estimated hospital costs associated with postoperative reintubation and tested the hypothesis that prolonged surveillance in the post-anesthesia care unit (PACU) modifies the hospital costs of reintubation. Retrospective observational research study. Two tertiary care academic healthcare networks...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of clinical anesthesia 2023-12, Vol.91 (C), p.111264-111264, Article 111264
Hauptverfasser: Rudolph, Maíra I., Azimaraghi, Omid, Salloum, Elie, Wachtendorf, Luca J., Suleiman, Aiman, Kammerer, Tobias, Schaefer, Maximilian S., Eikermann, Matthias, Kiyatkin, Michael E.
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container_issue C
container_start_page 111264
container_title Journal of clinical anesthesia
container_volume 91
creator Rudolph, Maíra I.
Azimaraghi, Omid
Salloum, Elie
Wachtendorf, Luca J.
Suleiman, Aiman
Kammerer, Tobias
Schaefer, Maximilian S.
Eikermann, Matthias
Kiyatkin, Michael E.
description We estimated hospital costs associated with postoperative reintubation and tested the hypothesis that prolonged surveillance in the post-anesthesia care unit (PACU) modifies the hospital costs of reintubation. Retrospective observational research study. Two tertiary care academic healthcare networks in the Bronx, New York and Boston, Massachusetts, USA. 68,125 adult non-cardiac surgical patients undergoing general anesthesia between 2016 and 2021. The exposure variable was unplanned reintubation within 7 days of surgery. The primary outcome was direct hospital costs associated with patient care related activities. We used a multivariable generalized linear model based on log-transformed costs data, adjusting for pre- and intraoperative confounders. We matched our data with data from the Healthcare Cost and Utilization Project-National Inpatient Sample (HCUP-NIS). In the key secondary analysis, we examined if prolonged postoperative surveillance, defined as PACU utilization (≥4 h) modifies the association between reintubation and costs of care. 1759 (2.6%) of patients were re-intubated within 7 days after surgery. Reintubation was associated with higher direct hospital costs (adjusted model estimate 2.05; 95% CI: 2.00–2.10) relative to no reintubation. In the HCUP-NIS matched cohort, the adjusted absolute difference (ADadj) in costs amounted to US$ 18,837 (95% CI: 17,921–19,777). The association was modified by the duration of PACU surveillance (p-for-interaction
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Retrospective observational research study. Two tertiary care academic healthcare networks in the Bronx, New York and Boston, Massachusetts, USA. 68,125 adult non-cardiac surgical patients undergoing general anesthesia between 2016 and 2021. The exposure variable was unplanned reintubation within 7 days of surgery. The primary outcome was direct hospital costs associated with patient care related activities. We used a multivariable generalized linear model based on log-transformed costs data, adjusting for pre- and intraoperative confounders. We matched our data with data from the Healthcare Cost and Utilization Project-National Inpatient Sample (HCUP-NIS). In the key secondary analysis, we examined if prolonged postoperative surveillance, defined as PACU utilization (≥4 h) modifies the association between reintubation and costs of care. 1759 (2.6%) of patients were re-intubated within 7 days after surgery. Reintubation was associated with higher direct hospital costs (adjusted model estimate 2.05; 95% CI: 2.00–2.10) relative to no reintubation. In the HCUP-NIS matched cohort, the adjusted absolute difference (ADadj) in costs amounted to US$ 18,837 (95% CI: 17,921–19,777). The association was modified by the duration of PACU surveillance (p-for-interaction &lt;0.001). In patients with a shorter PACU length of stay, reintubation occurred later (median of 2 days; IQR 1, 5) versus 1 days (IQR 0, 2; p &lt; .001), and was associated with magnified effects on hospital costs compared to patients who stayed in the PACU longer (ADadj of US$ 23,444, 95% CI: 21,217–25,799 versus ADadj of US$ 17,615, 95% CI: 16,350–18,926; p &lt; .001). Postoperative reintubation is associated with 2-fold higher hospital costs. Prolonged surveillance in the recovery room mitigated this effect. The cost-saving effect of longer PACU length of stay was likely driven by earlier reintubation in patients who needed this intervention. •Postoperative reintubation increases hospital costs of care by twofold.•Longer surveillance in the post-anesthesia care unit help mitigate these costs.•Prolonged surveillance may help identify patients who need reintubation.</description><identifier>ISSN: 0952-8180</identifier><identifier>EISSN: 1873-4529</identifier><identifier>DOI: 10.1016/j.jclinane.2023.111264</identifier><identifier>PMID: 37722150</identifier><language>eng</language><publisher>United States: Elsevier Inc</publisher><subject>Adult ; Anesthesia, General ; Cohort analysis ; Comorbidity ; Confidence intervals ; Confounding (Statistics) ; Cost estimates ; Extubation ; General anesthesia ; Generalized linear models ; Health care expenditures ; Health services utilization ; Heart surgery ; Hospital Costs ; Humans ; Intensive care ; Intubation ; Length of Stay ; Medical personnel ; Missing data ; PACU ; Patients ; Postoperative Period ; Postoperative reintubation ; Recovery Room ; Respiratory failure ; Retrospective Studies ; Surveillance ; Variables</subject><ispartof>Journal of clinical anesthesia, 2023-12, Vol.91 (C), p.111264-111264, Article 111264</ispartof><rights>2023 Elsevier Inc.</rights><rights>Copyright © 2023 Elsevier Inc. 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Retrospective observational research study. Two tertiary care academic healthcare networks in the Bronx, New York and Boston, Massachusetts, USA. 68,125 adult non-cardiac surgical patients undergoing general anesthesia between 2016 and 2021. The exposure variable was unplanned reintubation within 7 days of surgery. The primary outcome was direct hospital costs associated with patient care related activities. We used a multivariable generalized linear model based on log-transformed costs data, adjusting for pre- and intraoperative confounders. We matched our data with data from the Healthcare Cost and Utilization Project-National Inpatient Sample (HCUP-NIS). In the key secondary analysis, we examined if prolonged postoperative surveillance, defined as PACU utilization (≥4 h) modifies the association between reintubation and costs of care. 1759 (2.6%) of patients were re-intubated within 7 days after surgery. Reintubation was associated with higher direct hospital costs (adjusted model estimate 2.05; 95% CI: 2.00–2.10) relative to no reintubation. In the HCUP-NIS matched cohort, the adjusted absolute difference (ADadj) in costs amounted to US$ 18,837 (95% CI: 17,921–19,777). The association was modified by the duration of PACU surveillance (p-for-interaction &lt;0.001). In patients with a shorter PACU length of stay, reintubation occurred later (median of 2 days; IQR 1, 5) versus 1 days (IQR 0, 2; p &lt; .001), and was associated with magnified effects on hospital costs compared to patients who stayed in the PACU longer (ADadj of US$ 23,444, 95% CI: 21,217–25,799 versus ADadj of US$ 17,615, 95% CI: 16,350–18,926; p &lt; .001). Postoperative reintubation is associated with 2-fold higher hospital costs. Prolonged surveillance in the recovery room mitigated this effect. 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Reintubation was associated with higher direct hospital costs (adjusted model estimate 2.05; 95% CI: 2.00–2.10) relative to no reintubation. In the HCUP-NIS matched cohort, the adjusted absolute difference (ADadj) in costs amounted to US$ 18,837 (95% CI: 17,921–19,777). The association was modified by the duration of PACU surveillance (p-for-interaction &lt;0.001). In patients with a shorter PACU length of stay, reintubation occurred later (median of 2 days; IQR 1, 5) versus 1 days (IQR 0, 2; p &lt; .001), and was associated with magnified effects on hospital costs compared to patients who stayed in the PACU longer (ADadj of US$ 23,444, 95% CI: 21,217–25,799 versus ADadj of US$ 17,615, 95% CI: 16,350–18,926; p &lt; .001). Postoperative reintubation is associated with 2-fold higher hospital costs. Prolonged surveillance in the recovery room mitigated this effect. 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source MEDLINE; ScienceDirect Journals (5 years ago - present); ProQuest Central UK/Ireland
subjects Adult
Anesthesia, General
Cohort analysis
Comorbidity
Confidence intervals
Confounding (Statistics)
Cost estimates
Extubation
General anesthesia
Generalized linear models
Health care expenditures
Health services utilization
Heart surgery
Hospital Costs
Humans
Intensive care
Intubation
Length of Stay
Medical personnel
Missing data
PACU
Patients
Postoperative Period
Postoperative reintubation
Recovery Room
Respiratory failure
Retrospective Studies
Surveillance
Variables
title Association of reintubation and hospital costs and its modification by postoperative surveillance: A multicenter retrospective cohort study
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