Identifying Cancer-Directed Surgeries in Medicare Claims: A Validation Study Using SEER-Medicare Data.

PURPOSE Medicare claims provide a rich data source for large-scale quality assessment because data are available for all beneficiaries nationally. For cancer surgery, the absence of information regarding site of cancer and date of diagnosis on an administrative claim necessitates testing to ensure accurate quality assessment and public reporting. METHODS Using the SEER Medicare-linked database as the gold standard, we developed and tested an approach to identify cancer-directed surgeries from Medicare fee-for-service claims alone. Our analysis evaluated two questions: (1) Can we identify a large percentage of patients who underwent a cancer-directed surgery using only Medicare claims? (2) Of all patients identified as having undergone a cancer-directed surgery, what percentage had cancer? We evaluated this approach for 17 primary cancer sites. RESULTS The number of Medicare beneficiaries diagnosed with their first cancer during the years 2011 to 2013 and who underwent cancer-directed surgery ranged from 45 patients (bones and joints) to 20,163 patients (breast). The percentage of cancer-directed surgeries identified using Medicare claims alone ranged from 62% (skin melanoma) to 94% (prostate). For all but three cancer sites (skin melanoma, thyroid, and urinary bladder), more than 80% of cancer-directed surgeries were identified using our approach. Of all surgeries identified, more than 90% were for patients with cancer. CONCLUSION Identifying patients who underwent a cancer-directed surgery from Medicare claims is feasible for many cancer sites, although careful consideration needs to be given to the validity of each site. Our findings support the use of Medicare claims for large-scale quality assessment of cancer surgery by disease site.

[1]  P. Bach,et al.  Cancer survival in the context of growing hospital participation in Medicare ACOs. , 2018 .

[2]  David C. Miller,et al.  Implications of evolving delivery system reforms for prostate cancer care. , 2016, The American journal of managed care.

[3]  Angela Mariotto,et al.  Sensitivity of Medicare Claims to Identify Cancer Recurrence in Elderly Colorectal and Breast Cancer Patients , 2016, Medical care.

[4]  E. Elkin,et al.  Risk Adjusting Survival Outcomes in Hospitals That Treat Patients With Cancer Without Information on Cancer Stage. , 2015, JAMA oncology.

[5]  J. Warren,et al.  Challenges and opportunities in measuring cancer recurrence in the United States. , 2015, Journal of the National Cancer Institute.

[6]  Nikki M. Carroll,et al.  Validating Billing/Encounter Codes as Indicators of Lung, Colorectal, Breast, and Prostate Cancer Recurrence Using 2 Large Contemporary Cohorts , 2014, Medical care.

[7]  E John Orav,et al.  Variation in surgical-readmission rates and quality of hospital care. , 2013, The New England journal of medicine.

[8]  K. Bilimoria,et al.  Currently available quality improvement initiatives in surgical oncology. , 2012, Surgical oncology clinics of North America.

[9]  J. Birkmeyer,et al.  Hospital Quality and the Cost of Inpatient Surgery in the United States , 2012, Annals of surgery.

[10]  E. Lamont,et al.  Evaluation of trends in the cost of initial cancer treatment. , 2008, Journal of the National Cancer Institute.

[11]  H. Gold,et al.  Evaluation of three algorithms to identify incident breast cancer in Medicare claims data. , 2007, Health services research.

[12]  J. Birkmeyer,et al.  Operative Mortality and Procedure Volume as Predictors of Subsequent Hospital Performance , 2006, Annals of surgery.

[13]  Purushottam W. Laud,et al.  An Algorithm for the Use of Medicare Claims Data to Identify Women with Incident Breast Cancer , 2004 .

[14]  J. Birkmeyer,et al.  Hospital volume and operative mortality in cancer surgery: a national study. , 2003, Archives of surgery.

[15]  J. Birkmeyer,et al.  Hospital volume and surgical mortality in the United States. , 2002, The New England journal of medicine.

[16]  Deborah Schrag,et al.  Overview of the SEER-Medicare Data: Content, Research Applications, and Generalizability to the United States Elderly Population , 2002, Medical care.

[17]  J L Freeman,et al.  Accuracy and completeness of Medicare claims data for surgical treatment of breast cancer. , 2000, Medical care.

[18]  J. Goodwin,et al.  An approach to identifying incident breast cancer cases using Medicare claims data. , 2000, Journal of clinical epidemiology.

[19]  M. Choti,et al.  Hospital volume can serve as a surrogate for surgeon volume for achieving excellent outcomes in colorectal resection. , 1999, Annals of surgery.

[20]  J L Warren,et al.  Use of Medicare hospital and physician data to assess breast cancer incidence. , 1999, Medical care.

[21]  J. Warren,et al.  Use of Medicare data to identify incident breast cancer cases. , 1996 .