Abstract
BackgroundThe article introduces Programs for Injury Categorization, using the International Classification of Diseases (ICD) and R statistical software (ICDPIC-R). Starting with ICD-8, methods have been described to map injury diagnosis codes to severity scores, especially the Abbreviated Injury Scale (AIS) and Injury Severity Score (ISS). ICDPIC was originally developed for this purpose using Stata, and ICDPIC-R is an open-access update that accepts both ICD-9 and ICD-10 codes.MethodsData were obtained from the National Trauma Data Bank (NTDB), Admission Year 2015. ICDPIC-R derives CDC injury mechanism categories and an approximate ISS (“RISS”) from either ICD-9 or ICD-10 codes. For ICD-9-coded cases, RISS is derived similar to the Stata package (with some improvements reflecting user feedback). For ICD-10-coded cases, RISS may be calculated in several ways: The “GEM” methods convert ICD-10 to ICD-9 (using General Equivalence Mapping tables from CMS) and then calculate ISS with options similar to the Stata package; a “ROCmax” method calculates RISS directly from ICD-10 codes, based on diagnosis-specific mortality in the NTDB, maximizing the C-statistic for predicting NTDB mortality while attempting to minimize the difference between RISS and ISS submitted by NTDB registrars (ISSAIS). Findings were validated using data from the National Inpatient Survey (NIS, 2015).ResultsNTDB contained 917,865 cases, of which 86,878 had valid ICD-10 injury codes. For a random 100,000 ICD-9-coded cases in NTDB, RISS using the GEM methods was nearly identical to ISS calculated by the Stata version, which has been previously validated. For ICD-10-coded cases in NTDB, categorized ISS using any version of RISS was similar to ISSAIS; for both NTDB and NIS cases, increasing ISS was associated with increasing mortality. Prediction of NTDB mortality was associated with C-statistics of 0.81 for ISSAIS, 0.75 for RISS using the GEM methods, and 0.85 for RISS using the ROCmax method; prediction of NIS mortality was associated with C-statistics of 0.75–0.76 for RISS using the GEM methods, and 0.78 for RISS using the ROCmax method. Instructions are provided for accessing ICDPIC-R at no cost.ConclusionsThe ideal methods of injury categorization and injury severity scoring involve trained personnel with access to injured persons or their medical records. ICDPIC-R may be a useful substitute when this ideal cannot be obtained.
Highlights
This article describes Programs for Injury Categorization, using the International Classification of Diseases (ICD) and R statistical software (ICDPIC-R)
Injury severity scoring from anatomic injury codes Administrative databases and registries often record specific injuries using the ICD, which has gone from its Eighth Revision (ICD-8) through its Ninth (ICD-9) and Tenth (ICD-10) Revisions over the past few decades
Among 917,865 patients recorded in the National Trauma Data Bank (NTDB) research data set for Admission Year 2015, ICD-10-CM codes were used in 92,168 cases (10.0%), of which 86,878 cases (9.5%) had from 1 to 48 valid ICD-10-CM injury codes by the criteria described above
Summary
This article describes Programs for Injury Categorization, using the International Classification of Diseases (ICD) and R statistical software (ICDPIC-R). These programs are intended to provide inexpensive methods for translating ICD injury diagnosis codes The article introduces Programs for Injury Categorization, using the International Classification of Diseases (ICD) and R statistical software (ICDPIC-R). The Abbreviated Injury Scale (AIS) (Committee on Medical Aspects of Automotive Safety, AMA, 1971) was among the earliest attempts to categorize injuries by body region and severity, it was not initially defined in terms of ICD diagnoses. The original version of the AIS, developed and published by the American Medical Association (AMA) in 1971 (Committee on Medical Aspects of Automotive Safety, AMA, 1971), is used as a basis for ICDPIC-R. ICDPIC-R does not use these newer versions of the AIS
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