Background
Guidelines recommend
the confirmation of a COPD diagnosis with spirometry. International
Classification of Diseases, Ninth Revision, Clinical Modification,
diagnostic codes are frequently used to identify patients with COPD
for administrative purposes. However, coding the diagnosis of COPD
does not require confirmation using spirometry. The purpose of this
study was to determine how often the discharge diagnosis of COPD is
supported by spirometric measurements in the Veterans Affairs (VA)
health system.
Methods
We reviewed records
of patients hospitalized for COPD in a VA teaching hospital between
2005 and 2015. Individuals were counted once; rehospitalizations for
COPD in the same time frame were excluded. Patient records were
assessed for the presence of spirometric measurements and for
spirometric evidence of COPD.
Results
There were 1,278
discharges with the principal diagnosis of COPD and allied conditions
in the time frame. A total of 826 discharged patients were included.
Among them, 21% had no spirometric measurements, 12% were unable to
perform the breathing maneuvers correctly, 56% had spirometric
evidence of airways obstruction, and 11% had normal prebronchodilator
or postbronchodilator FEV1/FVC measurements. Older patients were more
likely to fail the spirometry test or have no documented spirometry.
Younger patients were more likely to have the first spirometry
conducted after their COPD hospitalizations.
Conclusions
Caution must be
taken when using the discharge diagnosis database to measure
health-care outcomes and determine resource management. Efforts are
needed to assure that patients clinically suspected of having COPD
are tested with spirometry to improve the accuracy of a COPD
diagnosis.
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