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. Author manuscript; available in PMC: 2021 Jun 27.
Published in final edited form as: Urology. 2015 Sep 14;87:88–94. doi: 10.1016/j.urology.2015.05.037

Table 1.

Association of total hospitalization cost and selected factors that predict increased cost, Nationwide Inpatient Sample, 2005-2009

Characteristics Living donor renal
transplant (n=5,568)
Deceased donor renal
transplant (n=8,757)
Estimate SE %
increase
p-
value*
Estimate SE %
increase
p-
value*
Any complication 0.131 0.012 14% <0.001 0.212 0.009 24% <0.001
Inpatient dialysis 0.042 0.010 4% <0.001 0.001 0.005 0% 0.79
Inpatient plasmapheresis 0.236 0.015 27% <0.001 0.240 0.020 27% <0.001
Length of stay quintiles <0.001
  4 or less days (reference) - - - - - - - -
  5 days 0.064 0.008 7% <0.001 0.100 0.008 10% <0.001
  6 days 0.134 0.009 14% <0.001 0.168 0.009 18% <0.001
  7 or 8 days 0.250 0.010 28% <0.001 0.275 0.009 32% <0.001
  More than 8 days 0.612 0.012 84% <0.001 0.601 0.009 82% <0.001
Hospital volume
  Low (reference) - - - - - - - -
  Medium 0.172 0.064 19% 0.008 0.175 0.055 19% 0.001
  High 0.182 0.067 20% 0.007 0.163 0.057 18% 0.004
*

Estimates are based on hierarchical linear regression models with primary outcome of log hospitalization cost. Estimates are adjusted for patient level (age, race, gender, comorbidity, median income, primary payer) and hospital level (bed size, location, region, teaching status, median time to transplant) variables. Percent increase was calculated by exponentiating estimates. After removing patients with missing data, 99.6% of living donor renal transplants and 98.7% of deceased donor renal transplants remained in the model.