Summary: Readmissions after exacerbations of chronic
obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) are penalized under the Hospital
Readmissions Reduction Program (HRRP). Understanding attributable diagnoses at
readmission would improve readmission reduction strategies. The object of this study was to determine factors that portend 30-day readmissions attributable
to COPD versus non-COPD diagnoses among patients discharged following COPD
exacerbations. Authors analyzed COPD discharges
in the Nationwide Readmissions Database from 2010 to 2016 using inclusion and
readmission definitions in HRRP.
Findings: Of 1,622,983 eligible COPD hospitalizations, 17.25% were
readmitted within 30 days (7.69% for COPD and 9.56% for other diagnoses).
Sepsis, heart failure, and respiratory infections were the most common non-COPD
return diagnoses. Patients readmitted for COPD were younger with fewer
comorbidities than patients readmitted for non-COPD. COPD returns were more
prevalent the first two days after discharge than non-COPD returns. Comorbidity
was a stronger driver for non-COPD than COPD readmissions.
Thirty-day readmissions following COPD exacerbations are common,
and 55% of them are attributable to non-COPD diagnoses at the time of return.
Higher burden of comorbidity is observed among non-COPD than COPD
rehospitalizations. Readmission reduction efforts should focus intensively on
factors beyond COPD disease management to reduce readmissions considerably by
aggressively attempting to mitigate comorbid conditions.