Validation of ICDPIC software injury severity scores using a large regional trauma registry.


Autoria(s): Greene, NH; Kernic, MA; Vavilala, MS; Rivara, FP
Data(s)

01/10/2015

Formato

325 - 330

Identificador

http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25985974

injuryprev-2014-041524

Inj Prev, 2015, 21 (5), pp. 325 - 330

http://hdl.handle.net/10161/10182

1475-5785

Relação

Inj Prev

10.1136/injuryprev-2014-041524

Tipo

Journal Article

Cobertura

England

Resumo

BACKGROUND: Administrative or quality improvement registries may or may not contain the elements needed for investigations by trauma researchers. International Classification of Diseases Program for Injury Categorisation (ICDPIC), a statistical program available through Stata, is a powerful tool that can extract injury severity scores from ICD-9-CM codes. We conducted a validation study for use of the ICDPIC in trauma research. METHODS: We conducted a retrospective cohort validation study of 40,418 patients with injury using a large regional trauma registry. ICDPIC-generated AIS scores for each body region were compared with trauma registry AIS scores (gold standard) in adult and paediatric populations. A separate analysis was conducted among patients with traumatic brain injury (TBI) comparing the ICDPIC tool with ICD-9-CM embedded severity codes. Performance in characterising overall injury severity, by the ISS, was also assessed. RESULTS: The ICDPIC tool generated substantial correlations in thoracic and abdominal trauma (weighted κ 0.87-0.92), and in head and neck trauma (weighted κ 0.76-0.83). The ICDPIC tool captured TBI severity better than ICD-9-CM code embedded severity and offered the advantage of generating a severity value for every patient (rather than having missing data). Its ability to produce an accurate severity score was consistent within each body region as well as overall. CONCLUSIONS: The ICDPIC tool performs well in classifying injury severity and is superior to ICD-9-CM embedded severity for TBI. Use of ICDPIC demonstrates substantial efficiency and may be a preferred tool in determining injury severity for large trauma datasets, provided researchers understand its limitations and take caution when examining smaller trauma datasets.

Idioma(s)

ENG

Palavras-Chave #Injury Diagnosis #Abbreviated Injury Scale #Area Under Curve #Female #Forms and Records Control #Humans #Injury Severity Score #International Classification of Diseases #Male #Outcome Assessment (Health Care) #Quality Improvement #Registries #Retrospective Studies #Software #Wounds and Injuries