Trends in hospitalizations among medicare survivors of aortic valve replacement in the United States from 1999 to 2010

1999年至2010年美国接受主动脉瓣置换术的医疗保险幸存者住院情况趋势

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Abstract

BACKGROUND: Mortality rates after aortic valve replacement have declined, but little is known about the risk of hospitalization among survivors and how that has changed with time. METHODS: Among Medicare patients who underwent aortic valve replacement from 1999 to 2010 and survived to 1 year, we assessed trends in 1-year hospitalization rates, mean cumulative length of stay (average number of hospitalization days per patient in the entire year), and adjusted annual Medicare payments per patient toward hospitalizations. We characterized hospitalizations by principal diagnosis and mean length of stay. RESULTS: Among 1-year survivors of aortic valve replacement, 43% of patients were hospitalized within that year, of whom 44.5% were hospitalized within 30 days (19.2% for overall cohort). Hospitalization rates were higher for older (50.3% for >85 years), female (45.1%), and black (48.9%) patients. One-year hospitalization rate decreased from 44.2% (95% confidence interval, 43.5 to 44.8) in 1999 to 40.9% (95% confidence interval, 40.3 to 41.4) in 2010. Mean cumulative length of stay decreased from 4.8 days to 4.0 days (p < 0.05 for trend); annual Medicare payments per patient were unchanged ($5,709 to $5,737; p = 0.32 for trend). The three most common principal diagnoses in hospitalizations were heart failure (12.7%), arrhythmia (7.9%), and postoperative complications (4.4%). Mean length of stay declined from 6.0 days to 5.3 days (p < 0.05 for trend). CONCLUSIONS: Among Medicare beneficiaries who survived 1 year after aortic valve replacement, 3 in 5 remained free of hospitalization; however, certain subgroups had higher rates of hospitalization. After the 30-day period, the hospitalization rate was similar to that of the general Medicare population. Hospitalization rates and cumulative days spent in hospital decreased with time.

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