Improving risk adjustment in the PRAiS (Partial Risk Adjustment in Surgery) model for mortality after paediatric cardiac surgery and improving public understanding of its use in monitoring outcomes

Author:

Pagel Christina1,Rogers Libby1,Brown Katherine2,Ambler Gareth3,Anderson David4,Barron David5,Blackshaw Emily6,Crowe Sonya1,English Kate7,Franklin Rodney8,Jesper Emily9,Meagher Laura10,Pearson Mike11,Rakow Tim6,Salamonowicz Marta12,Spiegelhalter David11,Stickley John5,Thomas Joanne9,Tibby Shane4,Tsang Victor2,Utley Martin1,Witter Thomas4

Affiliation:

1. Clinical Operational Research Unit, University College London, London, UK

2. Cardiac, Critical Care and Respiratory Division, Great Ormond Street Hospital for Children NHS Foundation Trust, London, UK

3. Department of Statistical Science, University College London, London, UK

4. Cardiology and Critical Care, Evelina London Children’s Hospital, Guy’s and St Thomas’ NHS Foundation Trust, London, UK

5. Cardiothoracic Surgery, Birmingham Children’s Hospital, Birmingham, UK

6. Department of Psychology, King’s College London, London, UK

7. Cardiology, Leeds Teaching Hospitals NHS Trust, Leeds, UK

8. Paediatric Cardiology, Royal Brompton & Harefield NHS Foundation Trust, London, UK

9. Sense about Science, London, UK

10. Technology Development Group, Dairsie, UK

11. Statistical Laboratory, Centre for Mathematical Sciences, University of Cambridge, Cambridge, UK

12. Children’s Heart Federation, Witham, UK

Abstract

BackgroundIn 2011, we developed a risk model for 30-day mortality after children’s heart surgery. The PRAiS (Partial Risk Adjustment in Surgery) model uses data on the procedure performed, diagnosis, age, weight and comorbidity. Our treatment of comorbidity was simplistic because of data quality. Software that implements PRAiS is used by the National Congenital Heart Disease Audit (NCHDA) in its audit work. The use of PRAiS triggered the temporary suspension of surgery at one unit in 2013. The public anger that surrounded this illustrated the need for public resources around outcomes monitoring.Objectives(1) To improve the PRAiS risk model by incorporating more information about comorbidities. (2) To develop online resources for the public to help them to understand published mortality data.DesignObjective 1 The outcome measure was death within 30 days of the start of each surgical episode of care. The analysts worked with an expert panel of clinical and data management representatives. Model development followed an iterative process of clinical discussion of risk factors, development of regression models and assessment of model performance under cross-validation. Performance was measured using the area under the receiving operator characteristic (AUROC) curve and calibration in the cross-validation test sets. The final model was further assessed in a 2014–15 validation data set.Objective 2 We developed draft website material that we iteratively tested through four sets of two workshops (one workshop for parents of children who had undergone heart surgery and one workshop for other interested users). Each workshop recruited new participants. The academic psychologists ran two sets of three experiments to explore further understanding of the web content.DataWe used pseudonymised NCHDA data from April 2009 to April 2014. We later unexpectedly received a further year of data (2014–15), which became a prospective validation set.ResultsObjective 1The cleaned 2009–14 data comprised 21,838 30-day surgical episodes, with 539 deaths. The 2014–15 data contained 4207 episodes, with 97 deaths. The final regression model included four new comorbidity groupings. Under cross-validation, the model had a median AUROC curve of 0.83 (total range 0.82 to 0.83), a median calibration slope of 0.92 (total range 0.64 to 1.25) and a median intercept of –0.23 (range –1.08 to 0.85). In the validation set, the AUROC curve was 0.86 [95% confidence interval (CI) 0.83 to 0.89], and its calibration slope and intercept were 1.01 (95% CI 0.83 to 1.18) and 0.11 (95% CI –0.45 to 0.67), respectively. We recalibrated the final model on 2009–15 data and updated the PRAiS software.Objective 2We coproduced a website (http://childrensheartsurgery.info/) that provides interactive exploration of the data, two animations and background information. It was launched in June 2016 and was very well received.LimitationsWe needed to use discharge status as a proxy for 30-day life status for the 14% of overseas patients without a NHS number. We did not have sufficient time or resources to extensively test the usability and take-up of the website following its launch.ConclusionsThe project successfully achieved its stated aims. A key theme throughout has been the importance of collaboration and coproduction. In particular for aim 2, we generated a great deal of generalisable learning about how to communicate complex clinical and mathematical information.Further workExtending our codevelopment approach to cover many other aspects of quality measurement across congenital heart disease and other specialised NHS services.FundingThe National Institute for Health Research Health Services and Delivery Research programme.

Funder

Health Services and Delivery Research (HS&DR) Programme

Publisher

National Institute for Health Research

Subject

General Economics, Econometrics and Finance

Reference110 articles.

1. Comparison of UK paediatric cardiac surgical performance by analysis of routinely collected data 1984–96: was Bristol an outlier?;Aylin;Lancet,2001

2. Bristol Royal Infirmary – the aftermath: six pages of analysis;Moore;Health Serv J,2001

3. The Bristol Royal Infirmary Inquiry 18th July 2001;Murphy;Ir Med J,2001

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