Background: Healthcare-related procedural misadventures remain underreported despite decades of investment in patient safety. International Classification of Diseases, 10th Revision (ICD-10) codes Y62-Y69 capture defined preventable adverse events during medical and surgical care. This study aimed to examine temporal patterns in Y62-Y69-coded events using aggregated, precomputed data from the TriNetX Global Collaborative Network. Methods: We conducted a retrospective observational study using deidentified electronic health records from the TriNetX platform, encompassing over 135 million patients aged 0-89 (years: 2016-2024). Incidence rates for Y62-Y69-coded events were analysed globally and across four regional networks, USA, Europe-Middle East-Africa (EMEA), Asia-Pacific (APAC) and Latin America (LATAM), with additional sensitivity analyses in cardiovascular (ICD-10: I00-I99) and oncological (ICD-10: C00-D49) cohorts. Temporal trends were explored descriptively using polynomial regression (for visual pattern illustration) and the Mann-Kendall trend test. Findings: Globally, Y62-Y69 incidence rates increased from 0.04 to 0.09 per 100 000 patients between 2016 and 2024 (125% increase), with inflection in the early postpandemic phase. EMEA exhibited the steepest rise (414%), followed by APAC (225%). The USA showed a non-linear pattern detectable only through polynomial modelling. LATAM and APAC trends lacked statistical significance, likely due to high year-to-year variability. Sensitivity analyses in the disease-specific cohorts reflected similar patterns, reinforcing the consistency of findings. Interpretation: This is the first global, real-world analysis of ICD-10 Y62-Y69-coded adverse events. The findings reveal a notable postpandemic escalation in procedural harm, underscoring the fragility of safety systems under operational stress. Regional heterogeneity and non-linear trajectories highlight the importance of locally tailored interventions and the need to reinvigorate global patient safety efforts. Data availability statement: All data were extracted from the TriNetX Global Collaborative Network. Aggregated incidence rates and the R code used for statistical analysis are provided in online supplemental file 2.

Retrospective analysis of preventable procedural adverse events (icd-10 Y62-y69) in the trinetx network. A multiregional study before, during and after the covid-19 pandemic / Caruso, Rosario; Di Muzio, Marco; Di Simone, Emanuele; Dionisi, Sara; Magon, Arianna; Conte, Gianluca; Stievano, Alessandro; Girani, Emanuele; Boveri, Sara; Perrone, Pier Mario; Castaldi, Silvana; Menicanti, Lorenzo; Dolansky, Mary. - In: BMJ QUALITY & SAFETY. - ISSN 2044-5415. - (2025), pp. 1-12. [10.1136/bmjqs-2025-019077]

Retrospective analysis of preventable procedural adverse events (icd-10 Y62-y69) in the trinetx network. A multiregional study before, during and after the covid-19 pandemic

Di Muzio, Marco
Primo
;
Di Simone, Emanuele;
2025

Abstract

Background: Healthcare-related procedural misadventures remain underreported despite decades of investment in patient safety. International Classification of Diseases, 10th Revision (ICD-10) codes Y62-Y69 capture defined preventable adverse events during medical and surgical care. This study aimed to examine temporal patterns in Y62-Y69-coded events using aggregated, precomputed data from the TriNetX Global Collaborative Network. Methods: We conducted a retrospective observational study using deidentified electronic health records from the TriNetX platform, encompassing over 135 million patients aged 0-89 (years: 2016-2024). Incidence rates for Y62-Y69-coded events were analysed globally and across four regional networks, USA, Europe-Middle East-Africa (EMEA), Asia-Pacific (APAC) and Latin America (LATAM), with additional sensitivity analyses in cardiovascular (ICD-10: I00-I99) and oncological (ICD-10: C00-D49) cohorts. Temporal trends were explored descriptively using polynomial regression (for visual pattern illustration) and the Mann-Kendall trend test. Findings: Globally, Y62-Y69 incidence rates increased from 0.04 to 0.09 per 100 000 patients between 2016 and 2024 (125% increase), with inflection in the early postpandemic phase. EMEA exhibited the steepest rise (414%), followed by APAC (225%). The USA showed a non-linear pattern detectable only through polynomial modelling. LATAM and APAC trends lacked statistical significance, likely due to high year-to-year variability. Sensitivity analyses in the disease-specific cohorts reflected similar patterns, reinforcing the consistency of findings. Interpretation: This is the first global, real-world analysis of ICD-10 Y62-Y69-coded adverse events. The findings reveal a notable postpandemic escalation in procedural harm, underscoring the fragility of safety systems under operational stress. Regional heterogeneity and non-linear trajectories highlight the importance of locally tailored interventions and the need to reinvigorate global patient safety efforts. Data availability statement: All data were extracted from the TriNetX Global Collaborative Network. Aggregated incidence rates and the R code used for statistical analysis are provided in online supplemental file 2.
2025
health policy; health services research; outcome assessment, health care; safety culture
01 Pubblicazione su rivista::01a Articolo in rivista
Retrospective analysis of preventable procedural adverse events (icd-10 Y62-y69) in the trinetx network. A multiregional study before, during and after the covid-19 pandemic / Caruso, Rosario; Di Muzio, Marco; Di Simone, Emanuele; Dionisi, Sara; Magon, Arianna; Conte, Gianluca; Stievano, Alessandro; Girani, Emanuele; Boveri, Sara; Perrone, Pier Mario; Castaldi, Silvana; Menicanti, Lorenzo; Dolansky, Mary. - In: BMJ QUALITY & SAFETY. - ISSN 2044-5415. - (2025), pp. 1-12. [10.1136/bmjqs-2025-019077]
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11573/1744791
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