PT - JOURNAL ARTICLE AU - Sanjay Mahant AU - Troy Richardson AU - Ron Keren AU - Rajendu Srivastava AU - Jeremy Meier ED - , TI - Variation in tonsillectomy cost and revisit rates: analysis of administrative and billing data from US children’s hospitals AID - 10.1136/bmjqs-2019-010730 DP - 2021 May 01 TA - BMJ Quality & Safety PG - 388--396 VI - 30 IP - 5 4099 - http://qualitysafety.bmj.com/content/30/5/388.short 4100 - http://qualitysafety.bmj.com/content/30/5/388.full SO - BMJ Qual Saf2021 May 01; 30 AB - Background Tonsillectomy is one of the most common and cumulatively expensive surgical procedures in children. We determined if substantial variation in resource use, as measured by standardised costs, exists across hospitals for performing tonsillectomy and if higher resource use is associated with better quality of care, as measured by revisits to hospital.Methods We conducted a retrospective analysis of children undergoing routine outpatient tonsillectomy between 2011 to 2017 across US children's hospitals using an administrative and billing data source. The primary outcome measures were the hospital tonsillectomy standardised cost and the 30-day revisit rate to hospital. We analysed the interhospital variation in standardised cost by determining the number of outlier hospitals in standardised cost and the intraclass correlation coefficient.Results 131 814 children (median age 6 years, IQR: 4,9; female sex 52.5%) underwent tonsillectomy for airway obstruction (62.9%) and infection (23.9%) across 28 hospitals. The median adjusted hospital standardised cost for tonsillectomy was $2392 (IQR: $1827, $2793; range: $1166 to $4222). There was substantial interhospital variation in costs as 11 (40%) hospitals were cost outliers, and the intraclass correlation coefficient was 0.62, suggesting that 62% of the variation in cost was attributable to variation between hospitals. The median hospital revisit rate was 9.5% (IQR: 7.8, 12.1) and higher hospital costs did not correlate with lower revisit rates (rs =0.03, 95% CI −0.36 to 0.41; p=0.87).Conclusions There is substantial variation in hospital resource use and standardised costs for routine outpatient tonsillectomy across US children’s hospitals. Higher resource use is not associated with lower revisit rates. Further study is needed to understand the practices of lower resource use hospitals who deliver high quality of care.Data are available upon reasonable request.