Different Approaches for Case-Mix Adjustment of Patient-Reported Outcomes to Compare Healthcare Providers—Methodological Results of a Systematic Review
Abstract
:Simple Summary
Abstract
1. Introduction
2. Methods
2.1. Studies and Methodological Decisions of Interest
- Risk of what outcome?
- Over what time frame?
- For what population?
- For what purpose?
2.2. Eligibility Criteria and Information Sources
2.3. Search and Study Selection
2.4. Data Collection Process, Data Items, and Risk of Bias in Individual Studies
2.5. Summary Measures and Synthesis of Results
2.6. Risk of Bias across Studies
3. Results
3.1. Study Selection and Characteristics
3.2. Quality of Included Studies (CASP Evaluation)
3.3. Provider Settings
3.4. “Iezzoni’s Four”
3.4.1. Risk of What Outcome?
3.4.2. For What Population?
3.4.3. Over What Time Period?
3.4.4. For What Purpose?
3.5. Selection of Adjustors
3.6. Patient Characteristics Included in the CMA Models
3.7. Provider Characteristics
3.8. Statistical Approaches
3.8.1. Calculation of Transformed Adjusted Scores (Unit/Scale-Preserving Approaches)
3.8.2. Calculation of Transformed Adjusted Scores (Unit/Scale-Aberrant Approaches)
3.8.3. Other
3.8.4. Minimum Case Number Requirements for Statistical Modeling/Adjustment
4. Discussion
Limitations
5. Conclusions and Recommendations
Author Contributions
Funding
Conflicts of Interest
Appendix A. Search String for MEDLine, Including Number of Hits of MEDLine Search
Appendix B
Author | Clearly Focused | Recruitement Acceptable | Exposure Accuartely Measured | Outcome Accurately Measured | Identified Confounding | Accounted for Confounding | Subject Follow-Up Complete Enough | Subject Follow-Up Long Enough | Results Precise | Believe Results | Applicable Results | Fit with Other Evidence | Implications for Practice |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Deutscher et al., 2018 [25] | x | can’t tell | x | x | x | x | can’t tell | can’t tell | x | x | x | x | x |
Farin et al., 2009 [20] | x | x | can’t tell | x | can’t tell | can’t tell | can’t tell | can’t tell | x | x | x | x | x |
Gozalo et al., [29] | x | can’t tell | x | x | x | x | can’t tell | x | x | x | x | x | x |
Gutacker et al., 2013 [21] | x | x | x | x | x | x | x | x | x | x | x | x | x |
Hendryx et al., 1999 [26] | x | x | x | x | can’t tell | x | x | can’t tell | x | x | can’t tell | x | x |
Khor et al., 2020 [22] | x | x | x | x | x | x | x | x | x | x | x | x | x |
Lutz et al., 2020 [27] | x | x | x | x | x | x | x | can’t tell | x | x | x | x | x |
Nuttall et al., 2015 [23] | x | can’t tell | x | x | x | x | can’t tell | x | x | x | x | x | x |
Resnik & Hart 2003 [28] | x | can’t tell | x | x | x | x | can’t tell | x | x | x | x | x | x |
Sivaganesan et al., 2018 [24] | x | can’t tell | x | x | x | x | x | x | x | x | x | x | x |
Varagunam et al., 2015 [30] | x | can’t tell | x | x | x | x | can’t tell | x | x | x | x | x | x |
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Author | Study Design | Participants/Setting | Data Sources | Study Size (Complete/Included Datasets) | Outcome (PRO) | No. of Variables Used for Case-Mix Adjustment (and Specific Adjustors) | Model R2 |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Deutscher et al., 2018 [25] | Retrospective analysis of prospectively collected data | Adult patients with lower back pain treated in outpatient physical therapy clinics (2014–2016) | FOTO | n = 341,642 patients n = 6934 clinicians n = 2107 hospitals | LCAT | 11: LCAT score at admission, age, sex, acuity, payer, surgical history, physical exercise history, medication/previous treatment, type of surgery, comorbidities | 0.373 |
Farin et al., 2009 [20] | Analysis of quality assurance data | Quality assurance report for statutory rehabilitation institutions in Germany on: 1, musculoskeletal; 2, cardiological; and 3, neurological diseases | QS Reha® | 1: n = 4045 patients in n = 27 hospitals 2: n = 2503 patients in n = 25 hospitals 3: n = 1477 patients in n = 12 hospitals | 1: IRES 2: SMFA 3: MacNew | Reported elsewhere [48]: 10: age, sex, somatic, functional and psychosocial status at admission, diagnosis, multimorbidity, treatment motivation, application for pension, education | Not reported |
Gozalo et al., [29] | Retrospective analysis of prospectively collected data | Outpatient rehabilitation clinics for patients with lower back pain | FOTO | n = 90,392 patients n = 2040 therapists n = 538 clinics | FOTO overall health status measure: OHS, PCS, PF-10 | 8: PRO at intake, age, gender, onset, surgery count, functional comorbidity index, fear avoidance level, payer type | OHS: 0.416 PCS: 0.345 PF-10: 0.421 |
Gutacker et al., 2013 [21] | Retrospective analysis of prospectively collected data | Analysis of hospital performance variation in hip replacement surgery | NHS PROMs and routinely collected inpatient data (HES) | n = 21,565 patients n = 153 hospitals | EQ-5D | 10: pre-treatment PROs, age, gender, deprivation index, weighted Charlson Index of comorbidities, number of additional comorbidities (not included in Charlson Index), time between pre-operative assessment and admission, primary surgery, revision surgery, treatment | Not reported |
Hendryx et al., 1999 [26] | Retrospective analysis of prospectively collected data | Development of outcome risk adjustment models for public mental health outpatient treatment programs | Patient-reported, case manager ratings, management information system data | n = 289 patients n = 6 mental health agencies | SF-12, ADL, Lehman Quality of Life Interviews | 8: sex, age, race, presence of severe primary diagnosis (major depression, schizophrenia, bipolar disorder), baseline levels of substance abuse, baseline PRO, baseline quality of life, baseline satisfaction with services | 0.34 |
Khor et al., 2020 [22] | Retrospective analysis of prospectively collected data | Analysis of variation in PROs 1 year after elective lumbar fusion surgery across surgeons and hospitals | Spine Care and Outcomes Assessment Program (Washington State, USA) | n = 737 patients n = 17 hospitals n = 58 surgeons | ODI | 11: age, sex, insurance status, race, ASA, smoking status, prior spine surgery, diagnosis, opiate use, asthma, baseline PRO | Not reported |
Lutz et al., 2020 [27] | Retrospective analysis of prospectively collected data | Benchmarking physical therapist study | ATI Patient Outcomes Registry | n = 182,276 patients n = 2799 physical therapists | MDQ, NDI | 10: sex, age, BMI, initial PRO, payer type, physical component score and mental component score of the Veterans RAND 12-Item Health Survey, state of physical therapy services, type of pain (acute/chronic), comorbidities | MDQ: 0.19 NDI: 0.19 |
Nuttall et al., 2015 [23] | Retrospective analysis of prospectively collected data | Feasibility study to analyze case-mix adjustment methodology for elective surgery | NHS PROMs and HES | n = 30,555 patients n = 237 providers | OKS | 11: baseline PRO, sex, ethnicity, age, deprivation index, assistance for completing questionnaires (baseline and follow-up), disability, previous surgery, comorbidities, type of surgery, length of post-operative stay | 0.258 (ordinary least square model) 0.257 (fixed effects model) |
Resnik & Hart 2003 [28] | Retrospective analysis of prospectively collected data | Outpatient rehabilitation clinics for patients with lower back pain | FOTO | n = 24,276 patients n = 930 therapists n = 354 hospitals | FOTO overall health status measure (OHS), PCS, PF--10 | 8: age, employment, exercise history, sex, intake PRO, onset, reimbursement, surgery | OHS: 0.416 PCS: 0.345 PF-10: 0.421 |
Sivaganesan et al., 2018 [24] | Retrospective analysis of prospectively collected data | Report of a risk-adjusted ranking of spine surgeons and sites performing elective lumbar surgery | Quality and Outcome Database (QOD) | n = 8834 patients n = 124 surgeons n = 21 sites | ODI, EQ-5D, VAS-BP/VAS-LP | 22 (19 at patient level: age, BMI, ethnicity, education, smoking status, opioid use, comorbidities, pre-operative symptoms, motor deficit, ASA, symptom duration, interbody graft placement, worker’s compensation, liability claims, insurance status, employment, baseline PRO); 3 constructs at surgeon level: site ID, years in practice, fellowship training) | Not applicable (Bayesian model) |
Varagunam et al., 2015 [30] | Retrospective analysis of prospectively collected data | Feasibility study analyzing different approaches on how to adjust PROM scores for individual consultant comparison for elective surgery | NHS PROMs | N = 65,465 (hip), 68,107 (knee) and 38,965 (hernia) patients N = 948 (hip), 1130 (knee) and 974 (hernia) consultants N = 183 (hip), 188 (knee) and 197 (hernia) clinics | OHS, OKS, EQ-5D | 6: age, sex, deprivation index, comorbidities, previous surgery, baseline PRO | Not reported |
Author | What Type of Provider? | Iezzoni’s Four | Which Adjustors? | Are Criteria for the Selection of Adjustors Met? 1 | How is Case-Mix Adjustment Statistically Performed? | How are Case-Mix Adjustment Results Reported? | |||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Risk of What Outcome? | For What Population? | Over What Time Period? | For What Purpose? | Socio-Economic Information? | Baseline PROM Included? | Comor-Bidities? | Adjustment for ProVider Characteristics? | Are the Adjustors Associated with the Outcome? | Do Adjustors Vary Across Providers? | ||||
Deutscher et al., 2018 [25] | Outpatient physical therapist clinics (US) | LCAT | Lower back pain patients treated in outpatient setting | Time between admission and discharge | Clinical ranking for performance measuring | x | x | x | – | Yes, assessed via back-step regression model approach | Not analyzed | Multiple regression, >50% complete patients per hospital and ≥10 complete cases per clinician per year required | Comparison between adjusted and unadjusted scores (agreement: 30%), ranking changed 70% of the hospitals, reported as percentile ranking |
Farin et al., 2009 [20] | In- and outpatient rehab. institutions (Germany) | IRES, SMFA, MacNew | Patients in statutory rehab. institutions | Time between start and end of rehab. | Quality assurance | x | x | x | – | Not reported | Not reported | Multilevel regression, taking the standardized residuals in the prediction as the case-mix-adjusted outcome, >199 patients per institution required | 95% confidence intervals reported graphically |
Gozalo et al., 2016 [29] | Outpatient rehabilitation clinics (US) | FOTO CATs, either generic or body impairment specific | Patients treated in outpatient rehabilitation clinics (for orthopedic conditions) | At intake and discharge from outpatient rehabilitation | Identify expert physical therapists | x | x | x | - | Not assessed | Not reported | Generalized linear model with >7 patients per clinic required | Ranking of clinics based on predicted clinic random intercept (including 95% confidence interval) |
Gutacker et al., 2013 [21] | NHS-funded hospitals (UK) | EQ-5D | Patients receiving hip replacement in an NHS-funded hospital | Time between before/day of admission and 6 months after surgery | Inter-provider comparison for performance measuring | x | x | x | – | Yes, assessed via regression modeling | Not reported | Multilevel linear regression and probit model, no minimum number of patients per hospital required | 95% confidence intervals reported graphically |
Hendryx et al., 1999 [26] | Outpatient mental health services (US) | SF-12 (functional status domain), Lehman Quality of Life Interview (Quality of Life domain) | Adult patients treated in outpatient mental health agencies | At baseline, 5 and 10 months | Inter-provider comparison for performance measuring | x | x | x | – | Not reported | Not assessed | Multiple linear regression, then calculating the ratio: observed/expected, no minimum number of patients per agency required | Observed score ranks and observed/expected ratio ranks are compared |
Khor et al., 2020 [22] | In-patient hospitals performing elective spine surgery (USA) | ODI (probability of improvement beyond MID and reaching minimal disability level) | Adults treated with elective lumbar fusion surgery | At 0–60 days before surgery and at 12-month follow-up | Inter-provider comparison for performance measuring | x | x | x | – | Yes (association based on findings from earlier studies by the research group) | For all adjustors except for age, sex, and smoking status | 1. Multiple logistic model 2. Calculation of an expected number of events per provider based on a previously published risk calculator 3. Calculation of observed/expected ratio 4. Calculation of a case-mix-adjusted event rate by multiplying the O/E ratio by the overall state-wide average; >9 patients per provider required | Adjusted and unadjusted scores, ICCs to describe the proportion of total variability accounted for by between-provider variance |
Lutz et al., 2020 [27] | Outpatient physical therapists (USA) | MDQ, NDI | Adults with episodes related to the lower back and neck with no history of related surgery | Not specified | Benchmarking physical therapists | x | x | x | x (state of physical therapy services) | Not reported | Not assessed | 1. Multiple linear regression 2. Calculation of an observed/expected ratio; >39 patients per physical therapist required | Reporting of counts of “outperforming, meeting, and underperforming” physical therapists (adjusted and unadjusted) based on 95% confidence intervals |
Nuttall et al., 2015 [23] | NHS-funded hospitals (UK) | OKS | Patients treated by NHS providers for unilateral knee replacement | Before and 3 or 6 months after surgery | Inter-provider comparison for performance measuring | x | x | x | – | Yes (association based on findings from earlier studies) | Not analyzed | Multilevel linear regression: generalized least squares with fixed effects, general least squares with random effects, ordinary least squares, then calculating: (observed/expected) * observed mean overall; no minimum number of patients per hospital required | Differences between different adjustment scores reported, ranking reported as funnel plots |
Resnik & Hart 2003 [28] | Outpatient rehab. clinics (USA) | OHS, PCS, PF-10 | Patients treated in outpatient rehab. clinics for lower back pain | At intake and discharge from outpatient rehabilitation | Identify expert physical therapists | x | x | x | – | Yes, bivariate analysis to identify adjustors | Not reported | Generalized linear model with >7 patients per therapist required, then calculating the difference: observed—expected; no minimum number of patients per clinic required | Percentiles of differences reported |
Sivaganesan et al., 2018 [24] | Sites performing spine surgery (USA) | ODI, EQ-5D, VAS-BP/VAS-LP | Patients treated with spine surgery | Before and 1 year after surgery | Inter-provider comparison for performance measuring | x | x | x | x | Yes, but no association coefficients are reported | Not reported | Random effects regression models and multilevel hierarchical Bayesian models (3 levels); no minimum number of patients per hospital required | Box plots for adjusted ranks per surgeon per site reported |
Varagunam et al., 2015 [30] | NHS-funded hospitals (UK) | OHS, OKS, EQ-5D | Patients treated by consultant in NHS providers | Before and three or six months after surgery | Inter-consultant comparison for performance measuring | x | x | x | - | Not assessed | Not reported | Multiple linear regression, >39 patients per NHS provider and >9 patients per consultant required; multilevel models | Number of consultants reported that perform better than expected, as expected, and worse than expected |
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Sibert, N.T.; Pfaff, H.; Breidenbach, C.; Wesselmann, S.; Kowalski, C. Different Approaches for Case-Mix Adjustment of Patient-Reported Outcomes to Compare Healthcare Providers—Methodological Results of a Systematic Review. Cancers 2021, 13, 3964. https://doi.org/10.3390/cancers13163964
Sibert NT, Pfaff H, Breidenbach C, Wesselmann S, Kowalski C. Different Approaches for Case-Mix Adjustment of Patient-Reported Outcomes to Compare Healthcare Providers—Methodological Results of a Systematic Review. Cancers. 2021; 13(16):3964. https://doi.org/10.3390/cancers13163964
Chicago/Turabian StyleSibert, Nora Tabea, Holger Pfaff, Clara Breidenbach, Simone Wesselmann, and Christoph Kowalski. 2021. "Different Approaches for Case-Mix Adjustment of Patient-Reported Outcomes to Compare Healthcare Providers—Methodological Results of a Systematic Review" Cancers 13, no. 16: 3964. https://doi.org/10.3390/cancers13163964
APA StyleSibert, N. T., Pfaff, H., Breidenbach, C., Wesselmann, S., & Kowalski, C. (2021). Different Approaches for Case-Mix Adjustment of Patient-Reported Outcomes to Compare Healthcare Providers—Methodological Results of a Systematic Review. Cancers, 13(16), 3964. https://doi.org/10.3390/cancers13163964