Abstract

Background: There is limited contemporary data exploring the impact of hospital characteristics on the outcomes of AMI-CA patients. Methods: We used the National Inpatient Sample database (2000-2017), to identify adult admissions with a primary diagnosis of AMI and concomitant CA. Inter-hospital transfers were excluded and hospitals were classified based on location and teaching status (rural, urban nonteaching and urban-teaching), and bed size (small, medium and large) as specified by the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality Results: Among 494,083 AMI-CA admissions, 9.3% received care at rural hospitals, 43.4% at urban non-teaching hospitals, and 47.3% at urban teaching hospitals. Compared to urban non-teaching and teaching hospitals, AMI-CA admissions at rural hospitals received lower rates of coronary angiography (36.5% vs 57.7% vs 69.1%), PCI (28.1% vs 42.6% vs 52.1%), CABG (3.4%, 7.6% vs. 10.1%), MCS (10.1% vs 17.8% vs 22.6%), and invasive mechanical ventilation (42.9%, 49.7% vs. 48.7%) (all p <0.001). Admissions to urban teaching hospitals had higher rates of acute organ failure, concomitant cardiogenic shock and higher rates of cardiac and non-cardiac procedures. When hospitals were stratified by bed-size, 9.8% of AMI-CA admissions were admitted to small hospitals, 26.0% to medium-sized, and 64.2% to large hospitals. Compared to medium and large hospitals, AMI-CA admissions at small hospitals had lower rates of coronary angiography (48.9% vs 56.8% vs 64.7%), PCI (37.5% vs 42.5% vs 48.4%), CABG (5.3%, 6.8% vs. 9.5%), MCS (14.3% vs 17.3% vs 21%), and invasive mechanical ventilation (48.3%, 50.1% vs. 48%) (all p <0.001). In-hospital mortality was higher in urban non-teaching (adjusted odds ratio [aOR] 1.17 [95% confidence interval {CI} 1.14-1.20]; p<0.001) and urban teaching hospitals (aOR 1.36 [95% CI 1.32-1.39]; p<0.001) compared to rural hospitals. Compared to small hospitals, medium (aOR 1.11 [95% CI 1.08-1.14]; p<0.001) and large hospitals (aOR 1.22 [95% CI 1.19-1.25]; p<0.001) were associated with higher in-hospital mortality. Conclusions: AMI-CA admissions to large and urban hospitals had higher in-hospital mortality compared to small and rural hospitals potentially due to greater acuity.

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