Abstract

In October 2015, the United States transitioned healthcare diagnosis codes from the International Classification of Diseases, Ninth Revision, Clinical Modification (ICD-9-CM), to the Tenth Revision (ICD-10-CM). Trend analyses of alcohol-related stays could show discontinuities solely from the change in classification systems. This study examined the impact of the ICD-10-CM coding system on estimates of hospital stays involving alcohol-related diagnoses. This analysis used 2014 to 2017 administrative data from the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality Healthcare Cost and Utilization Project State Inpatient Databases for 17 states. Quarterly ICD-9-CM data from second quarter 2014 through third quarter 2015 were concatenated with ICD-10-CM data from fourth quarter 2015 through first quarter 2017. Quarterly counts of alcohol-related stays were examined overall and then by 6 diagnostic subgroups: withdrawal, abuse, dependence, alcohol-induced mental disorders (AIMD), nonpsychiatric alcohol-induced disease, and intoxication or toxic effects. Within each group, we calculated the difference in the average number of stays between ICD-9-CM and ICD-10-CM coding periods. On average, the number of stays involving any alcohol-related diagnosis in the 6 quarters before and after the ICD-10-CM transition was stable. However, substantial shifts in stays occurred for alcohol abuse, AIMD, and intoxication or toxic effects. For example, the average quarterly number of stays involving AIMD was 170.7% higher in the ICD-10-CM period than in the ICD-9-CM period. This increase was driven in large part by 1 ICD-10-CM code, Alcohol use, unspecified with unspecified alcohol-induced disorder. Researchers conducting trend analyses of inpatient stays involving alcohol-related diagnoses should consider how ongoing modifications in the ICD-10-CM code system and coding guidelines might affect their work. An advisable approach for trend analyses across the ICD-10-CM transition is to aggregate diagnosis codes into broader, clinically meaningful groups-including a single global group that encompasses all alcohol-related stays-and then to select diagnostic groupings that minimize discontinuities between the 2 coding systems while providing useful information on this important indicator of population health.

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