Missed acute myocardial infarction in the emergency department-standardizing measurement of misdiagnosis-related harms using the SPADE method

Author:

Sharp Adam L.12,Baecker Aileen1,Nassery Najlla3,Park Stacy1,Hassoon Ahmed4,Lee Ming-Sum5,Peterson Susan6,Pitts Samantha3,Wang Zheyu7,Zhu Yuxin7,Newman-Toker David E.468

Affiliation:

1. Department of Research and Evaluation , Kaiser Permanente Southern California , Pasadena , CA , United States

2. Department of Health System Science , Kaiser Permanente School of Medicine , Pasadena , CA , United States

3. Department of Internal Medicine , Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine , Baltimore , MD , United States

4. Department of Epidemiology , Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health , Baltimore , MD , United States

5. Kaiser Permanente Southern California , Los Angeles Medical Center, Division of Cardiology , Los Angeles , CA , United States

6. Department of Emergency Medicine , Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine , Baltimore , MD , United States

7. Department of Biostatistics , Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health , Baltimore , MD , United States

8. Department of Neurology , Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine , Baltimore , MD , United States

Abstract

Abstract Objectives Diagnostic error is a serious public health problem. Measuring diagnostic performance remains elusive. We sought to measure misdiagnosis-related harms following missed acute myocardial infarctions (AMI) in the emergency department (ED) using the symptom-disease pair analysis of diagnostic error (SPADE) method. Methods Retrospective administrative data analysis (2009–2017) from a single, integrated health system using International Classification of Diseases (ICD) coded discharge diagnoses. We looked back 30 days from AMI hospitalizations for antecedent ED treat-and-release visits to identify symptoms linked to probable missed AMI (observed > expected). We then looked forward from these ED discharge diagnoses to identify symptom-disease pair misdiagnosis-related harms (AMI hospitalizations within 30-days, representing diagnostic adverse events). Results A total of 44,473 AMI hospitalizations were associated with 2,874 treat-and-release ED visits in the prior 30 days. The top plausibly-related ED discharge diagnoses were “chest pain” and “dyspnea” with excess treat-and-release visit rates of 9.8% (95% CI 8.5–11.2%) and 3.4% (95% CI 2.7–4.2%), respectively. These represented 574 probable missed AMIs resulting in hospitalization (adverse event rate per AMI 1.3%, 95% CI 1.2–1.4%). Looking forward, 325,088 chest pain or dyspnea ED discharges were followed by 508 AMI hospitalizations (adverse event rate per symptom discharge 0.2%, 95% CI 0.1–0.2%). Conclusions The SPADE method precisely quantifies misdiagnosis-related harms from missed AMIs using administrative data. This approach could facilitate future assessment of diagnostic performance across health systems. These results correspond to ∼10,000 potentially-preventable harms annually in the US. However, relatively low error and adverse event rates may pose challenges to reducing harms for this ED symptom-disease pair.

Funder

Gordon and Betty Moore Foundation

Publisher

Walter de Gruyter GmbH

Subject

Biochemistry (medical),Clinical Biochemistry,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health,Health Policy,Medicine (miscellaneous)

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