Title: Linking Quality of AMI Care and Outcomes
1Linking Quality of AMI Care and Outcomes
2AHA/ACC MI Guideline RecommendationsProcess
Quality Indicators
Acute Care
Discharge Care
- ECG within 10
- Aspirin lt 24
- Beta-Blocker lt 24
- Any Reperfusion (STEMI)
- If lytic, door-drug lt30
- If PCI, door-balloon lt90
- Ace-Inhibitor lt24hr (STEMI)
- IV Heparin use (NSTEMI)
- GP IIb-IIIa Inhibitor (NSTEMI)
- D/C Aspirin
- D/C Beta-Blocker
- D/C ACE-Inhibitor (low EF, DM)
- D/C Statin ( lipids)
- Smoking Cessation(smokers)
- Cardiac Rehab
JACC 200036970-1062 JACC 199934890-911
3The Cycle of Clinical Therapeutics
Clinical Trials
Discovery
Guidelines
Patient Outcomes
Performance Indicators
???
Caregiver Performance
Califf, R et al JACC 2002 in press
4Variation in AMI Care Across 1,247 US Hospitals
and its Association with Hospital Mortality
- Eric D Peterson, MD, MPH Lori S Parsons, BS
Charles V Pollack, Jr., MD, MA L Kristin Newby,
MD, MA Katherine A Littrell, PhD, RN, for the
National Registry of Myocardial Infarction (NRMI)
4 Investigators
Drs Peterson and Pollack are on the NRMI advisory
board and are on the speakers bureau for
Millennium Pharmaceuticals Dr Littrell is an
employee of Genentech, Inc, sponsor of NRMI
Duke Clinical Research Institute, Duke
University, Durham NC Pennsylvania Hospital,
Philadelphia PA, Genentech, Inc., San Francisco,
CA
Peterson Circulation 2002106(19)II-722
5Questions for Hospital Quality Assessment and
Quality Improvement
- How does care for MI patients vary across US
hospitals? - What is the gap between leading and lagging
centers? - To what degree are specific performance
indicators correlated to one another? - Does one need only measure a few metrics to
assess hospitals quality of care? Or, do ratings
shift depending on the metric? - Are process performance indicators associated
with patient outcomes? - Do centers with greater adherence to the AHA/ACC
MI Guidelines have lower mortality rates than
those not?
6Study Design
- Database National Registry of Myocardial
Infarction (NRMI) IV June 2000 thru June 2002 - Patients All confirmed MI pts (troponin or
CK/MB) - Exclusions
- Transfers out (incomplete mortality)
- Those with malignancy
- Those who died lt 24 hrs of admission
- Total Hospitals N 1,247
- Total Patients N 257,482
7Methods Process Measures of Quality
- Individual measures AHA/ACC guideline-based
acute and discharge care processes (n15) - Denominator Specific to measure (e.g., ST vs
NSTEMI) - Excluded those with treatment contraindications
- Composite Quality
- Each patients MI care assessed for adherence to
AMI guidelines for up to 15 care process - Calculated hospitals correct care out of
total care opportunities
8Methods Statistics
- Hierarchical models to account for pt clustering
within hospitals - Models include Clinical risk factors (fixed
effect) - Model C-index 0.76
- Hospital-level components (random effects)
- Region, bed size, academic, type (cath/PCI/CABG)
- Process performance measures
- Individual or composite
9Results Baseline Characteristics
10Results Hospital Characteristics
11Distribution of Hospital Process Indicators
- Mean of MIs per hospital per year
- 105 (70 NSTE MI)
- Mean eligible for ASA lt24 hrs measure
- 70
- Mean eligible for acute reperfusion measure
- 18
- Mean Composite Quality opportunities
- 805
12Results Overall MI Care Correct Care
13Results Leading and Lagging Hospital Quartiles
Acute Care (1)
14Results Leading and Lagging Hospital Quartiles
Acute Care (2)
15Results Gap between Leading and Lagging
Hospitals Quartiles Discharge Care
LVEF lt 40 Known hyperlipidemia
16Correlation between Hospital Performance Measures
17Relationship between Overall Composite Quality
and In-Hospital Mortality
18NRMI Quality Conclusions
- Large and persistent gap between AHA/ACC MI
guidelines and current community MI care - Wide variability between leading and lagging
centers - Hospitals who performed well on one individual
performance indicator may not do well on another - Need to look across care spectrum and composite
metrics most stable - Hospitals adherence with AHA/ACC guidelines
strongly correlated with patient outcomes - MI mortality rates 40 lower at leading adherent
hospitals relative to those lagging
19CRUSADE A National Quality Improvement
Initiative
Can Rapid Risk Stratification of Unstable Angina
Patients Suppress ADverse Outcomes with Early
Implementation of the ACC/AHA Guidelines
20CRUSADE Site Distribution
Active sites 420 Total ACS Patients 49,860
21Gap between Leading and Lagging Hospital
Quartiles Acute Care
22Gap between Leading and Lagging Hospital
Quartiles Discharge Care
LVEF lt 40 Known hyperlipidemia
23Performance Matters!Relationship between Process
and Outcome
5.9
5.0
4.6
3.6
Peterson ED 2002 AHA
24CRUSADE Practical Steps to Improve the Use of
Evidence-Based Therapies
- Identify local physician champions
- Secure institution wide commitment to improve
care - Promote collaboration b/t ED, primary care
cardiology - Develop educational and QI tools to promote
standard use of ACC/AHA guidelines - Provide site-specific reports with national
benchmarks - identify areas for QI
- Initiate rapid QI cycles and track improvement
overtime
25CRUSADE Trends in Acute Therapy
26CRUSADE Trends in Discharge Therapy
27CRUSADE Trends in Discharge
Recommendations