Evaluation of the LACE+ Index for Short-term Cardiac Surgery Outcomes: A Coarsened Exact Match Study.

Publication/Presentation Date

7-1-2020

Abstract

BACKGROUND: The potential of length of stay, acuity of admission, Charlson Comorbidity Index score, and emergency department visits in the past 6 months (LACE+) scores in patients undergoing cardiac surgery to predict short-term undesirable outcomes was examined.

METHODS: Coarsened exact matching was used to assess the predictive capacity of the LACE+ index among all cardiac surgery cases over a 2-year period (2016-2018) at 1 health system (n = 4001). Study subjects were matched according to characteristics not assessed by LACE+, including duration of surgery, wound class, body mass index, insurance type, median household income, and race. For a comparison of outcomes, LACE score was divided into quartiles and otherwise matched populations were compared in reference to LACE quartile (Q): Q4 versus Q1, Q4 versus Q2, and Q4 versus Q3.

RESULTS: Escalating LACE+ score significantly predicted increased readmission (6.99% versus 25.92% for Q1 versus Q4, 12.79% versus 26.74% for Q2 versus Q4, and 20.52% versus 27.66% for Q3 versus Q4, respectively; P < .001, P < .001, and P = .003), reoperation (2.39% versus 7.73% for Q1 versus Q4, and 4.33% versus 7.67% for Q2 versus Q4, respectively; P < .001 and P = .015, respectively), and emergency room visits at 30 days after surgery (6.64% versus 13.65% for Q1 versus Q4, and 11.20% versus 14.84% for Q2 versus Q4, respectively; P < .001 and P = .041, respectively) as well as readmission, reoperation, and emergency room visits from 30 to 90 days and 0 to 90 days after surgery. Increasing LACE score predicted higher rates of death during follow-up within 30 and 90 postoperative days (P < .001).

CONCLUSIONS: The LACE+ index may be suitable as a prediction model for important patient outcomes in a cardiac surgery population.

Volume

110

Issue

1

First Page

173

Last Page

182

ISSN

1552-6259

Disciplines

Medicine and Health Sciences

PubMedID

31715156

Department(s)

Department of Surgery

Document Type

Article

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