Surgeon input can increase the value of registry data: early experience from the American Spine Registry.

dc.contributor.author

Glassman, Steven D

dc.contributor.author

Carreon, Leah Y

dc.contributor.author

Asher, Anthony L

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De, Ayushmita

dc.contributor.author

Mullen, Kyle

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Porter, Kimberly R

dc.contributor.author

Shaffrey, Christopher I

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Knightly, John J

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Foley, Kevin T

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Albert, Todd J

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Brodke, Darrel S

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Polly, David W

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Bydon, Mohamad

dc.date.accessioned

2023-10-11T18:06:34Z

dc.date.available

2023-10-11T18:06:34Z

dc.date.issued

2023-09

dc.date.updated

2023-10-11T18:06:32Z

dc.description.abstract

Objective

Clear diagnostic delineation is necessary for the development of a strong evidence base in lumbar spinal surgery. Experience with existing national databases suggests that International Classification of Diseases, Tenth Edition (ICD-10) coding is insufficient to support that need. The purpose of this study was to assess agreement between surgeon-specified diagnostic indication and hospital-reported ICD-10 codes for lumbar spine surgery.

Methods

Data collection for the American Spine Registry (ASR) includes an option to denote the surgeon's specific diagnostic indication for each procedure. For cases treated between January 2020 and March 2022, surgeon-delineated diagnosis was compared with the ICD-10 diagnosis generated by standard ASR electronic medical record data extraction. For decompression-only cases, the primary analysis focused on the etiology of neural compression as determined by the surgeon versus that determined on the basis of the related ICD-10 codes extracted from the ASR database. For lumbar fusion cases, the primary analysis compared structural pathology, which may have required fusion, as determined by the surgeon versus that determined on the basis of the extracted ICD-10 codes. This allowed for identification of agreement between surgeon delineation and extracted ICD-10 codes.

Results

In 5926 decompression-only cases, agreement between the surgeon and ASR ICD-10 codes was 89% for spinal stenosis and 78% for lumbar disc herniation and/or radiculopathy. Both the surgeon and database indicated no structural pathology (i.e., none) suggesting the need for fusion in 88% of cases. In 5663 lumbar fusion cases, agreement was 76% for spondylolisthesis but poor for other diagnostic indications.

Conclusions

Agreement between surgeon-specified diagnostic indication and hospital-reported ICD-10 codes was best for patients who underwent decompression only. In the fusion cases, agreement with ICD-10 codes was best in the spondylolisthesis group (76%). In cases other than spondylolisthesis, agreement was poor due to multiple diagnoses or lack of an ICD-10 code that reflected the pathology. This study suggested that standard ICD-10 codes may be inadequate to clearly define the indications for decompression or fusion in patients with lumbar degenerative disease.
dc.identifier.issn

1547-5654

dc.identifier.issn

1547-5646

dc.identifier.uri

https://hdl.handle.net/10161/29224

dc.language

eng

dc.publisher

Journal of Neurosurgery Publishing Group (JNSPG)

dc.relation.ispartof

Journal of neurosurgery. Spine

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10.3171/2023.4.spine23135

dc.subject

Lumbar Vertebrae

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Humans

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Spinal Stenosis

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Spondylolisthesis

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Decompression, Surgical

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Spinal Fusion

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Registries

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United States

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Surgeons

dc.title

Surgeon input can increase the value of registry data: early experience from the American Spine Registry.

dc.type

Journal article

duke.contributor.orcid

Shaffrey, Christopher I|0000-0001-9760-8386

pubs.begin-page

404

pubs.end-page

410

pubs.issue

3

pubs.organisational-group

Duke

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School of Medicine

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Clinical Science Departments

pubs.organisational-group

Orthopaedic Surgery

pubs.organisational-group

Neurosurgery

pubs.publication-status

Published

pubs.volume

39

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