A study published in JAMA Cardiology found the annual hospital percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI)-related mortality may not be a reliable factor associated with hospital quality to consider in a practice change or when helping patients select high-quality hospitals. The study – Association Between Current and Future Annual Hospital Percutaneous Coronary Intervention Mortality Rates – sought to evaluate the association between reported risk-adjusted hospital PCI-related mortality and a hospital’s future PCI-related mortality. The study used data from the New York Percutaneous Intervention Reporting System from January 1, 1998, to December 31, 2016, to assess hospitals that perform PCI. The study included 67 New York hospitals and 960 hospital-years. The study found at hospitals with high or low PCI-related mortality rates, the rates largely regressed to the mean the following year. A hospital’s risk-adjusted mortality rate was poorly associated with its future mortality.
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- Association Between Current and Future Annual Hospital Percutaneous Coronary Intervention Mortality Rates. JAMA Cardiology. September 18 2019