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Elixhauserindex

The Elixhauser index, also known as the Elixhauser comorbidity index, is a set of 30 diagnostic categories designed to summarize a patient’s comorbidity burden using administrative hospital data. Developed by Anne Elixhauser and colleagues and first published in 1998, the index is intended for risk adjustment in observational studies and health services research. The 30 conditions cover a broad range of chronic and acute illnesses across cardiovascular, pulmonary, renal, hepatic, metabolic, neurologic, infectious, oncologic, and psychiatric domains. Each condition is defined by a set of ICD-9-CM discharge codes and, with the adoption of ICD-10-CM, corresponding ICD-10-CM codes are available, allowing application to modern data sets. In its original form, the Elixhauser index uses binary indicators for the presence or absence of each comorbidity.

There are two common implementations. The unweighted Elixhauser index tallies the number of present comorbidity categories,

Applications include risk adjustment in studies of hospital mortality, readmission, length of stay, and costs across

producing
a
count
of
risk
factors.
A
widely
used
weighted
version,
developed
by
van
Walraven
and
colleagues
in
2009,
assigns
coefficients
to
each
condition
to
produce
a
single
composite
score;
higher
scores
indicate
greater
comorbidity
burden
and
higher
risk
of
adverse
outcomes
such
as
mortality,
longer
length
of
stay,
or
higher
costs.
diverse
clinical
areas.
Limitations
include
dependence
on
the
accuracy
and
consistency
of
coding
practices
and
potential
variation
across
health
systems.
Software
implementations
and
mappings
to
ICD-10-CM
exist,
notably
through
the
Agency
for
Healthcare
Research
and
Quality
and
other
statistical
packages
for
administrative
data
analysis.