Cataract Surgery Complexity and Surgical Complication Rates Among Medicare Beneficiaries With and Without Dementia.
Pershing Suzann, Henderson Victor W, Goldstein Mary K, Lu Ying, Bundorf M Kate, Rahman Moshiur, Stein Joshua D
AI Summary
Dementia patients undergoing cataract surgery had more complex, longer procedures, but no higher complication rates, suggesting careful patient selection and potential missed opportunities for vision improvement.
Abstract
Purpose
To evaluate cataract surgery complexity and complications among US Medicare beneficiaries with and without dementia.
Design
Retrospective claims-based cohort study.
Participants
A 20% representative sample of Medicare beneficiaries, 2006-2015.
Methods
Dementia was identified from diagnosis codes on or prior to each beneficiary's first-eye cataract surgery. For each surgery, we identified setting, routine vs complex coding, anesthesia provider type, duration, and any postoperative hospitalization. We evaluated 30- and 90-day complication rates-return to operating room, endophthalmitis, suprachoroidal hemorrhage, retinal detachment, retinal tear, macular edema, glaucoma, or choroidal detachment-and used adjusted regression models to evaluate likelihood of surgical characteristics and complications. Complication analyses were stratified by second-eye cataract surgery within 90 days postoperatively.
Results
We identified 457,128 beneficiaries undergoing first-eye cataract surgery, 23,332 (5.1%) with dementia. None of the evaluated surgical complications were more likely in dementia-diagnosed beneficiaries. There was also no difference in likelihood of nonambulatory surgery center setting, anesthesiologist provider, or postoperative hospitalization. Dementia-diagnosed beneficiaries were more likely to have surgeries coded as complex (15.6% of cases vs 8.8%, P < .0001), and surgeries exceeding 30 minutes (OR = 1.21, 95% CI = 1.17-1.25).
Conclusions
Among US Medicare beneficiaries undergoing cataract surgery, those with dementia are more likely to have "complex" surgery" lasting more than 30 minutes. However, they do not have greater likelihood of surgical complications, higher-acuity setting, advanced anesthesia care, or postoperative hospitalization. This may be influenced by case selection and may suggest missed opportunities to improve vision. Future research is needed to identify dementia patients likely to benefit from cataract surgery.
MeSH Terms
Shields Classification
Key Concepts5
None of the evaluated surgical complications (return to operating room, endophthalmitis, suprachoroidal hemorrhage, retinal detachment, retinal tear, macular edema, glaucoma, or choroidal detachment) were more likely in US Medicare beneficiaries with dementia undergoing first-eye cataract surgery compared to those without dementia.
There was no difference in the likelihood of nonambulatory surgery center setting, anesthesiologist provider, or postoperative hospitalization for US Medicare beneficiaries with dementia undergoing first-eye cataract surgery compared to those without dementia.
US Medicare beneficiaries with dementia undergoing first-eye cataract surgery were more likely to have surgeries coded as complex (15.6% of cases vs 8.8%, P < .0001) compared to those without dementia.
Surgeries for US Medicare beneficiaries with dementia undergoing first-eye cataract surgery were more likely to exceed 30 minutes (OR = 1.21, 95% CI = 1.17-1.25) compared to those without dementia.
A 20% representative sample of US Medicare beneficiaries (2006-2015) was used to identify 457,128 beneficiaries undergoing first-eye cataract surgery, with 23,332 (5.1%) identified as having dementia.
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