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A comparison of reintervention rates after endovascular aneurysm repair between the Vascular Quality Initiative registry,Medicare claims,and chart review
Authors:Jesse A. Columbo  Ravinder Kang  Andrew W. Hoel  Jeanwan Kang  Kathleen A. Leinweber  Karissa S. Tauber  Regis Hila  Niveditta Ramkumar  Art Sedrakyan  Philip P. Goodney
Affiliation:1. Section of Vascular Surgery, Department of Surgery, Dartmouth-Hitchcock Medical Center, Lebanon, NH;2. VA Quality Scholars Program, Veterans Health Association, White River Junction, Vt;3. VA Outcomes Group, Veterans Health Association, White River Junction, Vt;4. Geisel School of Medicine, Dartmouth College, Hanover, NH;5. Dartmouth Institute for Health Policy and Clinical Practice, Dartmouth College, Hanover, NH;6. Division of Vascular Surgery, Department of Surgery, Feinberg School of Medicine, Northwestern University, Chicago, Ill;7. Department of Surgery, Weill Cornell Medical College, New York, NY
Abstract:

Objective

The accurate measurement of reintervention after endovascular aneurysm repair (EVAR) is critical during postoperative surveillance. The purpose of this study was to compare reintervention rates after EVAR from three different data sources: the Vascular Quality Initiative (VQI) alone, VQI linked to Medicare claims (VQI-Medicare), and a “gold standard” of clinical chart review supplemented with telephone interviews.

Methods

We reviewed the medical records of 729 patients who underwent EVAR at our institution between 2003 and 2013. We excluded patients without follow-up reported to the VQI (n = 68 [9%]) or without Medicare claims information (n = 114 [16%]). All patients in the final analytic cohort (n = 547) had follow-up information available from all three data sources (VQI alone, VQI linked to Medicare, and chart review). We then compared reintervention rates between the three data sources. Our primary end points were the agreement between the three data sources and the Kaplan-Meier estimated rate of reintervention at 1 year, 2 years, and 3 years after EVAR. For gold standard assessment, we supplemented chart review with telephone interview as necessary to assess reintervention.

Results

VQI data alone identified 12 reintervention events in the first year after EVAR. Chart review confirmed all 12 events and identified 18 additional events not captured by the VQI. VQI-Medicare data successfully identified all 30 of these events within the first year. VQI-Medicare also documented four reinterventions in this time period that did not occur on the basis of patient interview (4/547 [0.7%]). The agreement between chart review and VQI-Medicare data at 1 year was excellent (κ = 0.93). At 3 years, there were 81 (18%) reinterventions detected by VQI-Medicare and 70 (16%) detected by chart review for a sensitivity of 92%, specificity of 96%, and κ of 0.80. Kaplan-Meier survival analysis demonstrated similar reintervention rates after 3 years between VQI-Medicare and chart review (log-rank, P = .59).

Conclusions

Chart review after EVAR demonstrated a 6% 1-year and 16% 3-year reintervention rate, and almost all (92%) of these events were accurately captured using VQI-Medicare data. Linking VQI data with Medicare claims allows an accurate assessment of reintervention rates after EVAR without labor-intensive physician chart review.
Keywords:Reintervention  EVAR  Medicare claims  Event adjudication  ICD-9 codes for reintervention
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