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Hospital readmission following transplantation: identifying risk factors and designing preventive measures.
Journal of Community and Supportive Oncology 2015 September
BACKGROUND: About 1 in 7 of all hospitalized patients is readmitted within 30 days of discharge. The cost of readmissions is significant, with Medicare readmissions alone costing the health care system an estimated $28 billion a year.
OBJECTIVE: To identify the rates of and causes for readmission within 100 days of patients receiving a hematopoietic stem cell transplant.
METHODS: We performed a retrospective review of 235 consecutive transplant recipients (autologous, n = 144; allogeneic, n = 91) to determine rates and causes for readmission within 100 days of patients receiving a transplant. Medical records and hospital readmissions were reviewed for each patient.
RESULTS: 36 allogeneic patients accounted for 56 readmissions. 23 autologous patients accounted for 26 readmissions. Autologous transplant recipients were most commonly readmitted for the development of a fever (n = 15 patients) or cardiopulmonary issues (n = 4). The most prevalent reasons for readmission in the allogeneic recipients included a fever (n = 21) or the development or exacerbation of graft-versus-host disease (n = 5). The readmission length of stay was 6 days (median range, 1-91 days) for allogeneic patients and 4 days (median range, 1-22 days) for autologous patients. There was no difference in survival between the readmitted and the non-readmitted cohorts (
LIMITATIONS: Variations in clinical care, physician practices, and patient characteristics need to be considered when examining readmission rates. Most of the allogeneic patient population included unrelated donor recipients (65%) who received nonmyeloablative conditioning regimens (81% of allogeneic recipients). These features may not be characteristic of other centers.
CONCLUSIONS: In these high-risk patients, readmissions following a transplant are common. Enhanced predischarge education by nurses and pharmacists, along with ongoing outpatient education and rigorous outpatient follow-up through phone calls or social media may decrease readmission rates.
OBJECTIVE: To identify the rates of and causes for readmission within 100 days of patients receiving a hematopoietic stem cell transplant.
METHODS: We performed a retrospective review of 235 consecutive transplant recipients (autologous, n = 144; allogeneic, n = 91) to determine rates and causes for readmission within 100 days of patients receiving a transplant. Medical records and hospital readmissions were reviewed for each patient.
RESULTS: 36 allogeneic patients accounted for 56 readmissions. 23 autologous patients accounted for 26 readmissions. Autologous transplant recipients were most commonly readmitted for the development of a fever (n = 15 patients) or cardiopulmonary issues (n = 4). The most prevalent reasons for readmission in the allogeneic recipients included a fever (n = 21) or the development or exacerbation of graft-versus-host disease (n = 5). The readmission length of stay was 6 days (median range, 1-91 days) for allogeneic patients and 4 days (median range, 1-22 days) for autologous patients. There was no difference in survival between the readmitted and the non-readmitted cohorts (
LIMITATIONS: Variations in clinical care, physician practices, and patient characteristics need to be considered when examining readmission rates. Most of the allogeneic patient population included unrelated donor recipients (65%) who received nonmyeloablative conditioning regimens (81% of allogeneic recipients). These features may not be characteristic of other centers.
CONCLUSIONS: In these high-risk patients, readmissions following a transplant are common. Enhanced predischarge education by nurses and pharmacists, along with ongoing outpatient education and rigorous outpatient follow-up through phone calls or social media may decrease readmission rates.
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