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. 2022 Aug 25;17(8):e0273580. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0273580

Pediatric Clinical Classification System for use in Canadian inpatient settings

Peter J Gill 1,2,3,4,*, Thaksha Thavam 3, Mohammed Rashidul Anwar 3, Jingqin Zhu 3, Teresa To 1,3,4, Sanjay Mahant 1,2,3,4; on behalf of the Canadian Paediatric Inpatient Research Network (PIRN)
Editor: Jiangtao Gou5
PMCID: PMC9409563  PMID: 36006941

Abstract

Background

A classification system that categorizes International Statistical Classification of Diseases and Related Health Problems, Tenth Revision (ICD-10) diagnosis codes into clinically meaningful categories is important for pediatric clinical and health services research using administrative data. While a Pediatric Clinical Classification System (PECCS) is available for the United States ICD-10 system (i.e, ICD-10-CM), differences in the ICD-10 system between countries limits PECCS use in Canada.

Objective

To translate PECCS from ICD-10-CM to ICD-10-CA for use in Canada (PECCS-CA), and examine the utility of PECCS-CA in administrative data of pediatric hospital encounters in Ontario, Canada.

Methods

PECCS was translated by mapping each ICD-10-CA code to its corresponding ICD-10-CM code, based on code description and alphanumeric code, using automated functions in Microsoft Excel. All unmatched ICD-10-CA codes were manually matched to an ICD-10-CM code. The ICD-10-CA codes were mapped to a PECCS category based on the placement of the corresponding ICD-10-CM code. Finally, in this cross-sectional study, the utility of PECCS-CA was examined in pediatric hospital encounters in children <18 years of age with an inpatient or same day surgery encounter, between April 1, 2014 to March 31, 2019 in Ontario.

Results

In total, 16,992 ICD-10-CA diagnosis codes were mapped to 781 mutually exclusive condition categories that included pediatric specific conditions and treatments in PECCS-CA. From the 781 categories, 777 (99.5%) were derived from the original PECCS, 3 (0.4%) from merging the original PECCS categories, and 1 (0.1%) was newly developed. The PECCS-CA was applied to health administrative data of 911,732 hospital encounters in children. The most prevalent condition in children was low birth weight (n = 54,100 encounters).

Conclusion

The PECCS-CA is an open-source classification system which maps ICD-10-CA codes into 781 clinically important pediatric categories. The PECCS-CA can be used for pediatric health services and outcomes research in Canada.

Introduction

The large volume and cost of hospitalizations in Canadian children [1, 2] highlights the need to study this population to improve care and outcomes. In 2019, the Canadian Institute for Health Information (CIHI) reported that the provincial/territorial government hospital expenditure in Canada was over $64.2 billion dollars, with the hospital expenditure in children 19 years of age and younger to be over $6.8 billion [1]. These costs stem from over 260,000 inpatient hospitalizations observed in children in Canada [2]. Health administrative data is valuable for understanding the epidemiology of hospital use, and the reasons for admissions. The thousands of specific International Statistical Classification of Diseases and Related Health Problems, Tenth Revision, Canada (ICD-10-CA) diagnosis codes present, make it difficult to meaningfully analyze administrative data without using classification systems that map the specific codes into clinically relevant categories (e.g. pneumonia, depression). By grouping the diagnosis codes, researchers, payers, or policy makers can examine patterns in healthcare utilization and costs, develop patient cohorts for research, and answer important research questions using advanced observational study designs.

There are a few existing groupers that categorize ICD-10-CA diagnosis codes into clinical categories. One of these grouping methodologies is a translation of the Clinical Classifications Software (CCS) from the United States (US) ICD-10 codes (i.e. ICD-10-CM [Clinical Modification]) to the Canadian codes [3]. In this grouping methodology, the ICD-10-CA codes were mapped to 130 clinical categories of chronic health conditions [3]. Other grouping methodologies include the ICD-10-CA chapters which classifies diseases and related health problems and contains 23 broad category chapters [4], and the CIHI Case Mix Group (CMG) which categorizes acute care inpatients into clinically relevant groups using diagnosis and intervention codes from the patient’s hospital record [5, 6]. However, limitations in these grouping methodologies such as only categorizing diagnosis codes into chronic health condition categories, or lacking important pediatric conditions prevent its’ use in pediatric health services research. To date, a classification system that categorizes ICD-10-CA diagnosis codes in health administrative data into pediatric specific, mutually exclusive categories does not exist.

The Pediatric Clinical Classification System (PECCS) that categorizes the US ICD-10-CM codes into clinically distinctive categories currently exists [7]. The PECCS classifies 73,374 ICD-10-CM discharge diagnosis codes into 834 clinically distinctive categories, and identifies several important pediatric conditions (e.g. bronchiolitis, redundant prepuce and phimosis) including treatments (e.g. chemotherapy) [7, 8] which are missing from other classification systems. The PECCS was developed using the Healthcare Cost and Utilization Project (HCUP) Clinical Classifications Software (CCS) for ICD-10-CM diagnosis codes [9, 10] and Keren et al.’s ICD-9-CM pediatric diagnosis code grouper [11]. In the US, PECCS has been used in studies to group diagnosis codes of pediatric hospital encounters into mutually exclusive condition categories in children’s hospitals exclusively [12], and in general and children’s hospitals [13] to identify high priority conditions based on prevalence and costs. It has also been used to identify high priority conditions in pediatric ambulatory surgeries [14], and to classify the comorbidities present in pediatric patients hospitalized with catatonia [15]. Several countries have created their own clinically modified ICD-10 classification system to address their country-specific needs [16]. For instance, the US ICD-10 system contains over 70,000 ICD-10-CM codes, while the Canadian system contains over 16,000 ICD-10-CA codes [16]. These country-specific modifications limits the use of classification systems such as PECCS or HCUP CCS outside of the US.

Therefore, the objective of this study was to translate PECCS from ICD-10-CM to ICD-10-CA for use in pediatric health services research in Canada (PECCS-CA). Additionally, we examined the use of PECCS-CA on health administrative data of pediatric hospital encounters in Canada’s most populous province, Ontario.

Methods

Translation process of PECCS from ICD-10-CM to ICD-10-CA

The details behind the methodology used to develop the original PECCS for ICD-10-CM codes can be found in an existing research letter [7], and is also briefly presented in Fig 1. To translate PECCS, we first mapped each ICD-10-CA code to its corresponding ICD-10-CM code using automated functions in Microsoft® Excel® for Microsoft 365 MSO (Version 2111). Codes were first matched based on their code description. ICD-10-CA codes with the exact same or nearest match in code description to the ICD-10-CM codes were mapped together. We also used the full alphanumeric code to match the ICD-10-CA codes exactly to ICD-10-CM based on face validity. Next, ICD-10-CA codes that did not match through the initial step were matched to the nearest 3- or 4-character ICD-10-CM code using Microsoft Excel. Finally, all remaining unmatched ICD-10-CA codes were manually mapped to ICD-10-CM codes by reviewing their code descriptions and ensuring that codes were congruent based on clinical judgement. Each ICD-10-CA code was mapped to a PECCS category based on where their corresponding ICD-10-CM code was placed. All ICD-10-CA codes were manually reviewed initially by one author (M.R.A), and then by three others (P.J.G, S.M, T.T), to either retain, merge, or create new categories (Fig 2). Any discrepancies in the translation process were resolved by consensus and discussed over meetings.

Fig 1. Overview of the steps used to develop the original PECCS, the translation process to develop PECCS-CA, and its’ application on administrative data of hospital encounters.

Fig 1

This figure presents an overview of the steps our research team used to develop PECCS, translate PECCS from ICD-10-CM to ICD-10-CA to be used in Canada (PECCS-CA), and its’ application on administrative data of hospital encounters in Ontario. The references for the clip art pictures are presented below: 1) Clipart Library. (n.d.). Source: https://tinyurl.com/y69r2vm7; 2) PinClipart. (2018). Source: https://tinyurl.com/yxmdrv65; 3) Shutterstock. (2020). Source: https://tinyurl.com/y6a6qd29; 4) Tom Hand. (2019). Source: https://tinyurl.com/yyr2495o; 5) Convert Png To Icon. (2019). Source: https://tinyurl.com/y58snznv; 6) Pngitem. (2019). Source: https://tinyurl.com/y4hq8wa7; 7) SVG Repo. (n.d.). Source: https://tinyurl.com/yyvn6ons.

Fig 2. Diagram outlining the step-by-step procedure used to translate PECCS from ICD-10-CM to ICD-10-CA for use in Canada.

Fig 2

a The ICD-10 code description for A009 in ICD-10-CA and ICD-10-CM is ‘Cholera, unspecified’. b The ICD-10-CA code description for J47 is ‘Bronchiectasis’, and the ICD-10-CM code description for J479 is ‘Bronchiectasis, uncomplicated’. c The ICD-10-CA code description for H031 is ‘Involvement of eyelid in other infectious diseases classified elsewhere’, and the ICD-10-CM code description for H029 is ‘Unspecified disorder of eyelid’. d During the review, we aimed to retain as much of the PECCS categories for ICD-10-CA from the original PECCS categories from the ICD-10-CM. However, if needed, we also modified some categories by merging original PECCS categories that overlapped or created new categories to ensure that the codes fitted within the category.

Study design and data source

In this cross-sectional study, the use of PECCS-CA was examined by applying it on health administrative data of hospital encounters in children from all pediatric and general hospitals in Ontario. The data were obtained from linked health administrative databases housed at ICES. Datasets at ICES are linked using unique encoded identifiers known as the confidential ICES Key Number (IKN). ICES contains policies and procedures for its’ data handling practices, and every three years these policies are reviewed and approved by the Office of the Information Privacy Commissioner [17]. At ICES, a set of data standardization rules are applied to all datasets, data cleaning is conducted, the quality of data is routinely assessed and documented using the ICES’ Data Quality Framework for five different dimensions (Accuracy, Internal validity, External validity, Interpretability, and Relevance), and information about the data (e.g. data quality reports, how the data is collected) are held in an internal website on the ICES Intranet. In this study the Canadian Institute for Health Information Discharge Abstract Database (CIHI-DAD) and Same Day Surgery (SDS) database were utilized to obtain data on the inpatient and same day surgery hospital encounters including the admission date, age at admission, and the main responsible diagnosis recorded for the encounter using ICD-10-CA codes. This study was approved by the research ethics board at the Hospital for Sick Children, and followed the Strengthening the Reporting of Observational Studies in Epidemiology (STROBE) reporting guideline. Since deidentified administrative data were used, patient consent was waived.

Study population and statistical analysis

The study population included children less than 18 years of age with an inpatient or same day surgery hospital encounter between April 1, 2014 to March 31, 2019. Hospital encounters among children with missing or invalid dates (i.e. birth, death, discharge), encounters with a negative value for age at admission, encounters with a discharge date after March 31, 2019, encounters among non-Ontario residents, encounters with zero cost data, and encounters with the most responsible diagnosis code for normal newborn births, residual codes with no procedures performed during the encounter or external cause codes were excluded.

To illustrate the utility of PECCS-CA, we applied PECCS-CA on the hospital encounter data and identified the ten most prevalent conditions and their volume of encounters. An overview of the steps used to develop PECCS-CA from PECCS including its’ application on administrative data from Ontario can be found in Fig 1. Data were analyzed using SAS Enterprise Guide version 7.1 (SAS Institute, Inc).

Results

The conversion of PECCS from ICD-10-CM to ICD-10-CA resulted in mapping 16,992 ICD-10-CA codes into 781 clinically distinctive condition categories. Of the 781 categories, 777 (99.5%) were from the original PECCS, 3 (0.4%) were created from merging original categories, and 1 (0.1%) was newly created. Mapping discrepancies were observed for some ICD-10-CA codes that did not get mapped to their corresponding ICD-10-CM codes, using the automated function. Examples of mapping issues that were observed are presented in Table 1. These mapping discrepancies occurred, because the alphanumeric codes or their descriptions varied between the two ICD-10 systems. An appropriate ICD-10-CM code along with their corresponding PECCS-CA category had to be manually assigned (Table 1). Another issue observed was that some ICD-10 codes present in ICD-10-CA were not available in ICD-10-CM, thus, these codes had to be manually mapped to the next most appropriate ICD-10-CM code based on the clinical condition (Table 1).

Table 1. Examples of mapping issues and final decisions made in mapping ICD-10-CA codes to ICD-10-CM codes and their corresponding PECCS-CA categories.

ICD-10-CA Code ICD-10-CA Code Description ICD-10-CM Codea (Matched) ICD-10-CM Code Descriptiona (Matched) PECCS-CA Category Based on Matcha ICD-10-CM Codeb (Assigned) ICD-10-CM Code Descriptionb (Assigned) PECCS-CA Category based on Assignedb
Issue #1: Mapping discrepancies observed
E100 Type 1 diabetes mellitus with coma E1011 Type 1 diabetes mellitus with ketoacidosis with coma Diabetic ketoacidosis E10641 Type 1 diabetes mellitus with hypoglycemia with coma Type 1 diabetes mellitus with complications
E11319 Type 2 diabetes mellitus with preproliferative retinopathy, level of control unspecified E11319 Type 2 diabetes with unspecified diabetic retinopathy without macular edema Type 2 diabetes mellitus with complications E1139 Type 2 diabetes with other diabetic ophthalmic complication Type 2 diabetes mellitus with complications
F55 Abuse of non-dependence-producing substances F550 Abuse of antacids Substance-related disorders F558 Abuse of other non-psychoactive substances Substance-related disorders
K670 Chlamydial peritonitis K67 Disorders of peritoneum in infectious diseases classified elsewhere Peritonitis and intestinal abscess A7481 Chlamydial peritonitis Peritonitis and intestinal abscess
K671 Gonococcal peritonitis K67 Disorders of peritoneum in infectious diseases classified elsewhere Peritonitis and intestinal abscess A5485 Gonococcal peritonitis Sexually transmitted infections (not HIV or hepatitis)
Issue #2: Codes that were present in ICD-10-CA, but were not available in ICD-10-CM
F000 Dementia in Alzheimer’s disease with early onset N/A N/A N/A G300 Alzheimer’s disease with early onset Delirium dementia and amnestic and other cognitive disorders
K020 Caries limited to enamel N/A N/A N/A K029 Dental caries, unspecified Dental caries
K021 Caries of dentine
K022 Caries of cementum
K024 Odontoclasia
K025 Caries with pulp exposure
K028 Other dental caries

Abbreviations: ICD-10-CA, International Statistical Classification of Diseases and Related Health Problems, Tenth Revision Canada; ICD-10-CM, International Statistical Classification of Diseases, Tenth Revision, Clinical Modification; PECCS-CA, Pediatric Clinical Classification System for use in Canada; N/A, Not available.

a ICD-10-CM codes and code descriptions that were first matched to the ICD-10-CA code along with the corresponding PECCS-CA category during the automated mapping process.

b For Issue#1, the ICD-10-CM codes and code descriptions were proposed and assigned during the manual review stage, as the first matched ICD-10-CM code did not map adequately with the ICD-10-CA code. For Issue #2, there were no ICD-10-CM codes that were mapped using automated functions to the ICD-10-CA codes, thus, an ICD-10-CM code was proposed and manually assigned prior to the manual review stage. The PECCS-CA category was assigned to the ICD-10-CA code based on which PECCS category the corresponding ICD-10-CM code was placed.

This study included 911,732 hospital encounters in children in Ontario. The PECCS-CA was applied to the hospital encounter data, which classified the encounters into 727 PECCS-CA condition categories. Fig 3 presents the ten most prevalent conditions in children with hospital encounters, including important pediatric conditions such as bronchiolitis and neonatal hyperbilirubinemia. The most prevalent condition was low birth weight (n = 54,100 encounters).

Fig 3. Top 10 most prevalent conditions identified by applying PECCS-CA to administrative data of pediatric hospital encounters in Ontario, 2014–2019.

Fig 3

This figure focuses on the 10 most prevalent conditions in children with hospital encounters in Ontario during 2014–2019. Data for pediatric hospital encounters (inpatient discharges, same day surgery) were obtained from the Canadian Institute for Health Information Discharge Abstract Database (CIHI-DAD) and Same Day Surgery (SDS) database. (n = total number of hospital encounters for the condition; % = percentage of hospital encounters for the condition from all hospital encounters. The percentages displayed do not equal to 100%, because only the top 10 most prevalent conditions are presented).

The PECCS-CA also contained several non-specific condition categories (e.g. those that start with “Other”), which were derived from the original PECCS. Although, the aim of PECCS-CA was to have mutually exclusive clinically relevant categories, it was necessary to have some non-specific categories to group ICD-10 diagnosis codes that were heterogeneous and were not appropriate to be placed in any of the other clinically relevant categories. Table 2 presents an example of three non-specific pediatric categories from PECCS-CA and the top 10 most responsible ICD-10-CA diagnoses that led to hospital encounters for each category in children in Ontario.

Table 2. Examples of non-specific pediatric conditions in PECCS-CA and the 10 most responsible ICD-10-CA diagnosis codes that led to hospital encounters for the conditions in children in Ontario, 2014–2019.

Condition Total Number of Hospital Encounters ICD-10-CA Diagnosis Codesa ICD-10-CA Diagnosis Code Descriptionsa No. (%) of Encountersb
Other skin disorders 2,315 L905 Scar conditions and fibrosis of skin 629 (27.2)
L720 Epidermal cyst 580 (25.1)
L989 Disorder of skin and subcutaneous tissue, unspecified 113 (4.9)
L721 Trichilemmal cyst 106 (4.6)
L918 Other hypertrophic disorders of skin 99 (4.3)
L729 Follicular cyst of skin and subcutaneous tissue, unspecified 92 (4.0)
L929 Granulomatous disorder of skin and subcutaneous tissue, unspecified 72 (3.1)
R610 Localized hyperhidrosis 65 (2.8)
L988 Other specified disorders of skin and subcutaneous tissue 60 (2.6)
L732 Hidradenitis suppurativa 42 (1.8)
Other ICD-10-CA codes Other ICD-10-CA code descriptions 457 (19.7)
Other nutritional, endocrine, and metabolic disorders 1,460 R634 Abnormal weight loss 467 (32.0)
E835 Disorders of calcium metabolism 116 (7.9)
R638 Other symptoms and signs concerning food and fluid intake 108 (7.4)
E713 Disorders of fatty-acid metabolism 70 (4.8)
R629 Lack of expected normal physiological development, unspecified 56 (3.8)
R630 Anorexia 55 (3.8)
E711 Other disorders of branched-chain amino-acid metabolism 49 (3.4)
E710 Maple-syrup-urine disease 47 (3.2)
E806 Other disorders of bilirubin metabolism 46 (3.2)
E740 Glycogen storage disease 45 (3.1)
Other ICD-10-CA codes Other ICD-10-CA code descriptions 401 (27.5)
Other nervous system disorders 1,447 G510 Bell’s palsy 85 (5.9)
G934 Encephalopathy, unspecified 79 (5.5)
R132 Esophageal dysphagia 73 (5.0)
Z462 Fitting and adjustment of other devices related to nervous system and special senses 61 (4.2)
R251 Tremor, unspecified 59 (4.1)
R2688 Other and unspecified abnormalities of gait and mobility 58 (4.0)
G373 Acute transverse myelitis in demyelinating disease of central nervous system 53 (3.7)
G939 Disorder of brain, unspecified 49 (3.4)
G08 Intracranial and intraspinal phlebitis and thrombophlebitis 48 (3.3)
G540 Brachial plexus disorders 48 (3.3)
Other ICD-10-CA codes Other ICD-10-CA code descriptions 834 (57.6)

Abbreviations: ICD-10-CA, International Statistical Classification of Diseases and Related Health Problems, Tenth Revision Canada.

a Top 10 most responsible ICD-10-CA diagnosis codes and corresponding code descriptions that led to hospital encounters for each non-specifc pediatric condition. The remainder of the ICD-10-CA codes that led to hospital encounters for the condition category are grouped under ‘Other ICD-10-CA codes’.

b Indicates the number and percentage of hospital encounters due to each ICD-10-CA diagnosis code within the corresponding condition.

Discussion and conclusion

This study converted PECCS from ICD-10-CM to ICD-10-CA to be used in Canada (PECCS-CA) using a detailed step wise process which included automation and manual review. The conversion process resulted in categorizing 16,992 ICD-10-CA codes into 781 mutually exclusive, clinically important categories including important pediatric conditions in inpatient settings and treatments (e.g. chemotherapy). The PECCS-CA was then applied to health administrative data of pediatric hospital encounters in Ontario, the most populous province of Canada, to evaluate its’ face validity and identify the most prevalent conditions in children. The PECCS-CA can be utilized to examine trends in healthcare services use and cost, rank healthcare use by conditions for research prioritization, and conduct outcomes research in pediatrics.

The PECCS-CA is the first classification system specific to pediatrics that includes important pediatric conditions (e.g. bronchiolitis, neonatal hyperbilirubinemia) found in children admitted in hospitals. This classification system has also been recently used to identify conditions that should be prioritized for research in hospitalized children based on the prevalence, cost, and variation in cost of pediatric hospitalizations in Ontario, Canada [18].

Although other grouping methodologies that categorize ICD-10-CA codes into clinical groups exist, their limitations makes them difficult to use in hospital pediatric research [35]. One classification system mapped ICD-10-CA codes into 130 mutually exclusive chronic health condition categories [3], however, its focus on chronic conditions limits its use in pediatric research in inpatient settings where children can be diagnosed with acute infectious diseases (e.g. bronchiolitis) or have injuries (e.g. fractures) [18]. Other existing grouping methodologies for ICD-10-CA includes the ICD-10-CA chapters [4] and the CIHI Case Mix Group (CMG) [5, 6]. Although the ICD-10-CA chapters only contains 23 broad category chapters, it further breaks down into more detailed subcategories [4]. Regardless, diagnosis codes for some important pediatric conditions are categorized together, limiting its’ utility to differentiate between important conditions. For instance, transient tachypnea of newborn, a distinct condition category identified in Keren et al.’s ICD-9-CM pediatric diagnosis code grouper [11], and the tenth most prevalent condition found in our study using PECCS-CA, was grouped under the ICD-10-CA Chapter XVI ‘certain conditions originating in the perinatal period’, and further categorized under the diagnosis codes for ‘respiratory distress of newborn’ [4, 19]. Therefore, this condition may have not been identified as prevalent if the ICD-10-CA chapters were used instead. As for the CIHI CMGs patient classification system, it uses both diagnosis and intervention codes from hospital records to classify inpatients into clinical groups [5, 6], and is not publicly available to be used. Conversely, the full-set of PECCS-CA codes is available online [20].

The CCS is a grouper used to classify the ICD-10-CM codes into clinically meaningful categories [9], and the beta version (2019.1) of the CCS was used to develop the original PECCS for the ICD-10-CM codes [7, 8]. The beta version of the CCS categorized more than 70,000 ICD-10-CM diagnosis codes into 283 clinical categories [21]. The utility of PECCS-CA was not compared to the CCS using the same hospital encounter dataset due to the differences in the ICD-10 coding systems. However, we previously compared the original PECCS’s ability to detect pediatric conditions with the CCS using pediatric hospitalization data from the US [7]. The PECCS demonstrated increased specificity of detecting pediatric health conditions. For instance, 13,261 pediatric hospital encounters in the US were classified into miscellaneous mental health disorders using CCS, while the same encounters were classified into the following when PECCS was used: miscellaneous mental health disorders (5,357 encounters), anorexia nervosa (4,709 encounters), conversion disorder (2,979 encounters), and bulimia nervosa (216 encounters) [7]. If the CCS was able to be applied to our current dataset, important pediatric conditions including bronchiolitis, neonatal hyperbilirubinemia, and transient tachypnea of newborn would not have been detected. This further demonstrates the importance of PECCS-CA for pediatric health services research in Canada.

There were a number of non-specific condition categories found in PECCS-CA as these categories came directly from the original PECCS for ICD-10-CM codes [7, 8]. Some examples of these categories include: other skin disorders; other nutritional, endocrine, and metabolic disorders; and other nervous system disorders. In the original PECCS, we minimized the number of non-specfic categories as much as possible as the ICD-10-CM codes within the category were heterogenous and the category itself did not have much clinical value. In addition, similar to the process done by HCUP [9], the number of ICD-10 codes within each non-specific category was minimized as much as possible by segregating out codes that can be rather placed in other clinically relevant categories. Nevertheless, non-specific conditions are also present in other existing classification systems [3, 5, 9].

There are some important limitations of PECCS-CA. First, it does not identify if the condition is acute or chronic. However, it is still effective to be used with different data sources and at different pediatric settings [7]. Second, it contains some non-specific conditions (e.g. those that start with “Other”). Last, PECCS-CA cannot be applied to datasets in countries outside of Canada due to the different versions of ICD-10 system present across countries. Nevertheless, it can be modified to be used with other country-specific versions of the ICD-10 system.

In conclusion, this study aimed to present a translated version of PECCS from ICD-10-CM to ICD-10-CA to be used in Canada. PECCS-CA is an open-source classification system that categorizes ICD-10-CA diagnosis codes into 781 clinically meaningful categories to identify pediatric specific conditions including treatments. It can be used by researchers from different pediatric fields and for different purposes which includes understanding the trends in healthcare services use and cost, rank the healthcare use by conditions, and to conduct patient outcomes research in pediatrics. Future works can include translating the PECCS for use with other country-specific versions of the ICD-10 classficiation system to be used internationally.

Supporting information

S1 Data. PECCS-CA for ICD-10-CA codes (update—February 09, 2022).

(XLSX)

Acknowledgments

This study was supported by ICES, which is funded by an annual grant from the Ontario Ministry of Health (MOH) and the Ministry of Long-Term Care (MLTC). ICES is an independent, non-profit research institute whose legal status under Ontario’s health information privacy law allows it to collect and analyze health care and demographic data, without consent, for health system evaluation and improvement.

The opinions, results and conclusions reported in this paper are those of the authors and are independent from the funding sources. No endorsement by ICES or the Ontario MOH is intended or should be inferred. The funding sources had no role in the study design, data collection and analysis, decision to publish, or preparation of the manuscript. Parts of this material are based on data and information compiled and provided by the Canadian Institute for Health Information (CIHI). However, the analyses, conclusions, opinions, and statements expressed herein are those of the author, and not necessarily those of CIHI.

Canadian Paediatric Inpatient Research Network (PIRN): Patricia C Parkin MD, Ann Bayliss MD, Ronik Kanani MD, Sean Murray MD, Catherine Pound MD MSc, Mahmoud Sakran MD, Anupam Sehgal MD, Sepi Taheri MD, Gita Wahi MD PhD, Peter J Gill MD DPhil, and Sanjay Mahant MD MSc. The lead author for PIRN is Peter J Gill, and his contact email address is peter.gill@sickkids.ca.

Data Availability

The dataset for this study is held securely in coded form at ICES. The ICES is a prescribed entity under the Ontario’s Personal Health Information Privacy Act (PHIPA). As a prescribed entity, ICES is allowed to collect personally identifiable information for analysis that evaluate, plan, and/or monitor the health care system or for analysis related to the health or safety of the public without receiving individual consent. While legal data sharing agreements between ICES and data providers (e.g., healthcare organizations and government) prohibit ICES from making the dataset publicly available, access may be granted to those who meet pre-specified criteria for confidential access, available at www.ices.on.ca/DAS (email: das@ices.on.ca). Details on submitting a request form to access the data is found in the following hyperlink (https://www.ices.on.ca/DAS/Submitting-your-request). The full dataset creation plan is available from the authors upon request.

Funding Statement

This study was funded through the New Investigator grant (21-01) from the Physicians' Services Incorporated (PSI) Foundation. The authors who received the award were PJG, TT, and SM. The funders had no role in study design, data collection and analysis, decision to publish, or preparation of the manuscript.

References

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Jiangtao Gou

16 Jun 2022

PONE-D-22-13110Pediatric Clinical Classification System for use in Canadian inpatient settingsPLOS ONE

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Please confirm that this does not alter your adherence to all PLOS ONE policies on sharing data and materials, by including the following statement: "This does not alter our adherence to  PLOS ONE policies on sharing data and materials.” (as detailed online in our guide for authors http://journals.plos.org/plosone/s/competing-interests).  If there are restrictions on sharing of data and/or materials, please state these. Please note that we cannot proceed with consideration of your article until this information has been declared. 

Please include your updated Competing Interests statement in your cover letter; we will change the online submission form on your behalf.

4. In your Data Availability statement, you have not specified where the minimal data set underlying the results described in your manuscript can be found. PLOS defines a study's minimal data set as the underlying data used to reach the conclusions drawn in the manuscript and any additional data required to replicate the reported study findings in their entirety. All PLOS journals require that the minimal data set be made fully available. For more information about our data policy, please see http://journals.plos.org/plosone/s/data-availability.

Upon re-submitting your revised manuscript, please upload your study’s minimal underlying data set as either Supporting Information files or to a stable, public repository and include the relevant URLs, DOIs, or accession numbers within your revised cover letter. For a list of acceptable repositories, please see http://journals.plos.org/plosone/s/data-availability#loc-recommended-repositories. Any potentially identifying patient information must be fully anonymized.

Important: If there are ethical or legal restrictions to sharing your data publicly, please explain these restrictions in detail. Please see our guidelines for more information on what we consider unacceptable restrictions to publicly sharing data: http://journals.plos.org/plosone/s/data-availability#loc-unacceptable-data-access-restrictions. Note that it is not acceptable for the authors to be the sole named individuals responsible for ensuring data access.

We will update your Data Availability statement to reflect the information you provide in your cover letter.

5. One of the noted authors is a group or consortium Canadian Paediatric Inpatient Research Network. In addition to naming the author group, please list the individual authors and affiliations within this group in the acknowledgments section of your manuscript. Please also indicate clearly a lead author for this group along with a contact email address.

6. Your ethics statement should only appear in the Methods section of your manuscript. If your ethics statement is written in any section besides the Methods, please move it to the Methods section and delete it from any other section. Please ensure that your ethics statement is included in your manuscript, as the ethics statement entered into the online submission form will not be published alongside your manuscript. 

7.Please review your reference list to ensure that it is complete and correct. If you have cited papers that have been retracted, please include the rationale for doing so in the manuscript text, or remove these references and replace them with relevant current references. Any changes to the reference list should be mentioned in the rebuttal letter that accompanies your revised manuscript. If you need to cite a retracted article, indicate the article’s retracted status in the References list and also include a citation and full reference for the retraction notice.

Additional Editor Comments:

This manuscript has been reviewed by two experts. Please follow their comments and revise your manuscript.

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Reviewers' comments:

Reviewer's Responses to Questions

Comments to the Author

1. Is the manuscript technically sound, and do the data support the conclusions?

The manuscript must describe a technically sound piece of scientific research with data that supports the conclusions. Experiments must have been conducted rigorously, with appropriate controls, replication, and sample sizes. The conclusions must be drawn appropriately based on the data presented.

Reviewer #1: Yes

Reviewer #2: Yes

**********

2. Has the statistical analysis been performed appropriately and rigorously?

Reviewer #1: Yes

Reviewer #2: Yes

**********

3. Have the authors made all data underlying the findings in their manuscript fully available?

The PLOS Data policy requires authors to make all data underlying the findings described in their manuscript fully available without restriction, with rare exception (please refer to the Data Availability Statement in the manuscript PDF file). The data should be provided as part of the manuscript or its supporting information, or deposited to a public repository. For example, in addition to summary statistics, the data points behind means, medians and variance measures should be available. If there are restrictions on publicly sharing data—e.g. participant privacy or use of data from a third party—those must be specified.

Reviewer #1: Yes

Reviewer #2: No

**********

4. Is the manuscript presented in an intelligible fashion and written in standard English?

PLOS ONE does not copyedit accepted manuscripts, so the language in submitted articles must be clear, correct, and unambiguous. Any typographical or grammatical errors should be corrected at revision, so please note any specific errors here.

Reviewer #1: Yes

Reviewer #2: Yes

**********

5. Review Comments to the Author

Please use the space provided to explain your answers to the questions above. You may also include additional comments for the author, including concerns about dual publication, research ethics, or publication ethics. (Please upload your review as an attachment if it exceeds 20,000 characters)

Reviewer #1: Abstract:

- In the background section, it would be helpful for a broader audience if you add some commentary on why a classification system for organizing diagnostic codes is needed- (e.g., in order to enable analyses of administrative datasets that answer important clinical and health services questions). You comment on this in the conclusion, but the rationale for conversion might be more helpful right at the beginning.

Introduction:

- Again, would be helpful to take some space here to explain that one cannot meaningfully analyze administrative datasets without such groupers because analyses cannot accommodate/run when several thousand diagnosis codes are included. By grouping them, we are able to ask important research questions using advanced observational study designs.

- It would also be helpful to provide some brief literature review here of examples of using PECCS or CCS to define high-priority conditions or answer helpful clinical research questions.

- Need to add some background on the other classification system options available and their limitations- why do we need PECCS-CA?

Methods:

- Would be helpful to provide brief descriptions of the data sources and elements contained in each as well as how they are linked and how data quality is monitored/maintained

Results

- The top 10 rankings seem a bit surprising and different from other prior similar analyses. Although this may be out of the scope of this analysis, it would be helpful to directly compare the results of using this grouper PECCS-CA vs CCS using the same dataset, or at least qualitatively compare the findings to such prior analyses. That would allow some more in depth assessment of the validity/success of the authors mapping process as well as potentially enable authors to directly demonstrate the advantages of this new classification system. Those would both be valuable additions to both the results and discussion.

Reviewer #2: This cross-sectional study used a rational, stepwise approach to map ICD-10-CA codes onto ICD-10-CM codes to adapt the US-based PECCS classification system to Canadian settings. The study is an important contribution to pediatric health services research since it will allow for research that is specific to child health in Canada. The authors’ newly developed PECCS-CA classification system will be publicly available, which will be very helpful to pediatric health services researchers tracking healthcare utilization, cost, and outcomes in Canada. I have no major or minor concerns about this manuscript – it is clearly written and the discussion does a good job providing context for why development of this pediatric-specific and country-specific classification system is important.

Although authors are not able to make the data used for this research publicly available, they provide a reasonable answer for why this is the case.

**********

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If you choose “no”, your identity will remain anonymous but your review may still be made public.

Do you want your identity to be public for this peer review? For information about this choice, including consent withdrawal, please see our Privacy Policy.

Reviewer #1: No

Reviewer #2: No

**********

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Attachment

Submitted filename: Review_PONE-D-22-13110.docx

PLoS One. 2022 Aug 25;17(8):e0273580. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0273580.r002

Author response to Decision Letter 0


14 Jul 2022

We have responded to the specific reviewer and editor comments in the Word Document labelled 'Response to Reviewers'. Please see this document as it is attached with this submission. We can also paste the responses below for completion:

JOURNAL REQUIREMENTS

When submitting your revision, we need you to address these additional requirements.

JR1.1 Please ensure that your manuscript meets PLOS ONE's style requirements, including those for file naming. The PLOS ONE style templates can be found at

https://journals.plos.org/plosone/s/file?id=wjVg/PLOSOne_formatting_sample_main_body.pdf and

https://journals.plos.org/plosone/s/file?id=ba62/PLOSOne_formatting_sample_title_authors_affiliations.pdf

Response: We have ensured that our manuscript meets PLOS ONE’s style requirements.

JR1.2 We note that the grant information you provided in the ‘Funding Information’ and ‘Financial Disclosure’ sections do not match.

When you resubmit, please ensure that you provide the correct grant numbers for the awards you received for your study in the ‘Funding Information’ section.

Response: We have ensured that the grant information provided in the ‘Funding Information’ section matches with the ‘Financial Disclosure’ section. We checked the ‘Funding Information’ section and the grant numbers do match with the ‘Financial Disclosure’ section. Please see the ‘Financial Disclosure’ presented below:

“Financial Disclosure: This study was funded through the New Investigator grant (21-01) from the Physicians' Services Incorporated (PSI) Foundation. The authors who received the award were PJG, TT, and SM. The funders had no role in study design, data collection and analysis, decision to publish, or preparation of the manuscript.”

JR1.3 Thank you for stating the following in the Competing Interests section:

"We have read the journal's policy and the authors of this manuscript have the following competing interests:

PJG and SM have received grants from the Physicians' Services Incorporated (PSI) Foundation during the conduct of the study and grants from the Canadian Institute of Health Research (CIHR). PJG has also received personal fees from CIHR and EBMLive outside the submitted work. SM has also received personal fees from the Journal of Hospital Medicine outside the submitted work. The above indicated items does not alter our adherence to PLOS ONE policies on sharing data and materials."

Please confirm that this does not alter your adherence to all PLOS ONE policies on sharing data and materials, by including the following statement: "This does not alter our adherence to PLOS ONE policies on sharing data and materials.” (as detailed online in our guide for authors http://journals.plos.org/plosone/s/competing-interests). If there are restrictions on sharing of data and/or materials, please state these. Please note that we cannot proceed with consideration of your article until this information has been declared.

Please include your updated Competing Interests statement in your cover letter; we will change the online submission form on your behalf.

Response: We have now revised the Competing Interests statement to include the above indicated statement. We have also added this updated Competing Interests statement into our cover letter and is indicated below:

“Competing Interests Statement: We have read the journal's policy and the authors of this manuscript have the following competing interests:

PJG and SM have received grants from the Physicians' Services Incorporated (PSI) Foundation during the conduct of the study and grants from the Canadian Institute of Health Research (CIHR). PJG has also received personal fees from CIHR and EBMLive outside the submitted work. SM has also received personal fees from the Journal of Hospital Medicine outside the submitted work. This does not alter our adherence to PLOS ONE policies on sharing data and materials.”

JR1.4 In your Data Availability statement, you have not specified where the minimal data set underlying the results described in your manuscript can be found. PLOS defines a study's minimal data set as the underlying data used to reach the conclusions drawn in the manuscript and any additional data required to replicate the reported study findings in their entirety. All PLOS journals require that the minimal data set be made fully available. For more information about our data policy, please see http://journals.plos.org/plosone/s/data-availability.

Upon re-submitting your revised manuscript, please upload your study’s minimal underlying data set as either Supporting Information files or to a stable, public repository and include the relevant URLs, DOIs, or accession numbers within your revised cover letter. For a list of acceptable repositories, please see http://journals.plos.org/plosone/s/data-availability#loc-recommended-repositories. Any potentially identifying patient information must be fully anonymized.

Important: If there are ethical or legal restrictions to sharing your data publicly, please explain these restrictions in detail. Please see our guidelines for more information on what we consider unacceptable restrictions to publicly sharing data: http://journals.plos.org/plosone/s/data-availability#loc-unacceptable-data-access-restrictions. Note that it is not acceptable for the authors to be the sole named individuals responsible for ensuring data access.

We will update your Data Availability statement to reflect the information you provide in your cover letter.

Response: We have revised the Data Availability statement following the above instructions. The data used in this study was obtained from ICES. The legal restrictions and data sharing agreements prohibits ICES from making the dataset publicly available, thus, we are unable to publicly share the data that were used in this study. However, readers who are interested in accessing the linked data can access it through the ICES Data & Analytic Services (DAS). Please see the data availability statement for this study indicated below:

“Data Availability Statement: The dataset for this study is held securely in coded form at ICES. The ICES is a prescribed entity under the Ontario’s Personal Health Information Privacy Act (PHIPA). As a prescribed entity, ICES is allowed to collect personally identifiable information for analysis that evaluate, plan, and/or monitor the health care system or for analysis related to the health or safety of the public without receiving individual consent. While legal data sharing agreements between ICES and data providers (e.g., healthcare organizations and government) prohibit ICES from making the dataset publicly available, access may be granted to those who meet pre-specified criteria for confidential access, available at www.ices.on.ca/DAS (email: das@ices.on.ca). Details on submitting a request form to access the data is found in the following hyperlink (https://www.ices.on.ca/DAS/Submitting-your-request). The full dataset creation plan is available from the authors upon request.”

JR1.5 One of the noted authors is a group or consortium Canadian Paediatric Inpatient Research Network. In addition to naming the author group, please list the individual authors and affiliations within this group in the acknowledgments section of your manuscript. Please also indicate clearly a lead author for this group along with a contact email address.

Response: We have now listed the individual group members within the group, Canadian Paediatric Inpatient Research Network, in the Acknowledgements section of the manuscript. The group members listed below are non-author collaborators or contributors. This is similar to the non-author collaborators acknowledged in the following PLOS One article: (https://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0230587#ack). The affiliation for each individual member is removed in the Acknowledgements section of the manuscript but is indicated in this response below for completion. We have also added the lead author for this group along with their contact email address in this section of the manuscript, which is the same as the corresponding author for the manuscript (Acknowledgements, page 20, lines 348 - 351):

“Canadian Paediatric Inpatient Research Network (PIRN): Patricia C Parkin MD1,2,3,4, Ann Bayliss MD5, Ronik Kanani MD1,6, Sean Murray MD7, Catherine Pound MD MSc8,9, Mahmoud Sakran MD10,11, Anupam Sehgal MD10, Sepi Taheri MD12, and Gita Wahi MD MSc13. The affiliations for the PIRN members include: 1Department of Pediatrics, University of Toronto, Toronto, Ontario, Canada; 2The Hospital for Sick Children, Toronto, Ontario, Canada; 3Child Health Evaluative Sciences, SickKids Research Institute, Toronto, Ontario, Canada; 4Institute of Health Policy, Management and Evaluation, Dalla Lana School of Public Health, The University of Toronto, Toronto, Ontario, Canada; 5Children’s Health Division, Trillium Health Partners, Mississauga, Ontario, Canada; 6Department of Pediatrics, North York General Hospital, Toronto, Ontario, Canada; 7Department of Pediatrics, Northern Ontario School of Medicine, Sudbury, Ontario, Canada; 8Children’s Hospital of Eastern Ontario, Ottawa, Ontario, Canada; 9University of Ottawa, Ottawa, Ontario, Canada; 10Department of Pediatrics, Queens University, Kingston, Ontario, Canada; 11Department of Pediatrics, Lakeridge Health, Oshawa, Ontario, Canada; 12Department of Pediatrics, Western University, London, Ontario, Canada; 13Division of General Pediatrics, Department of Pediatrics, McMaster University and McMaster Children’s Hospital, Hamilton, Ontario, Canada. The lead author for PIRN is Peter J Gill MD, DPhil, and his contact email address is peter.gill@sickkids.ca.”

JR1.6 Your ethics statement should only appear in the Methods section of your manuscript. If your ethics statement is written in any section besides the Methods, please move it to the Methods section and delete it from any other section. Please ensure that your ethics statement is included in your manuscript, as the ethics statement entered into the online submission form will not be published alongside your manuscript.

Response: The ethics statement is in the Methods section of the manuscript. Please see subsection ‘Study design and data source’ under the ‘Methods’ section of the manuscript (page 8, lines 172 - 173).

JR1.7 Please review your reference list to ensure that it is complete and correct. If you have cited papers that have been retracted, please include the rationale for doing so in the manuscript text, or remove these references and replace them with relevant current references. Any changes to the reference list should be mentioned in the rebuttal letter that accompanies your revised manuscript. If you need to cite a retracted article, indicate the article’s retracted status in the References list and also include a citation and full reference for the retraction notice.

Response: We have reviewed our reference list and revised a few of the references to ensure that the format of the references follows the Vancouver reference style as indicated in PLOS ONE’s submission guidelines webpage. We have tracked these changes on the manuscript.

ADDITIONAL EDITOR COMMENTS

This manuscript has been reviewed by two experts. Please follow their comments and revise your manuscript.

[Note: HTML markup is below. Please do not edit.]

REVIEWERS’ COMMENTS

Reviewer's Responses to Questions

Comments to the Author

RC1.1 Is the manuscript technically sound, and do the data support the conclusions?

The manuscript must describe a technically sound piece of scientific research with data that supports the conclusions. Experiments must have been conducted rigorously, with appropriate controls, replication, and sample sizes. The conclusions must be drawn appropriately based on the data presented.

Reviewer #1: Yes

Reviewer #2: Yes

Response: Thank you for your response.

RC1.2 Has the statistical analysis been performed appropriately and rigorously?

Reviewer #1: Yes

Reviewer #2: Yes

Response: Thank you for your response.

RC1.3 Have the authors made all data underlying the findings in their manuscript fully available?

The PLOS Data policy requires authors to make all data underlying the findings described in their manuscript fully available without restriction, with rare exception (please refer to the Data Availability Statement in the manuscript PDF file). The data should be provided as part of the manuscript or its supporting information, or deposited to a public repository. For example, in addition to summary statistics, the data points behind means, medians and variance measures should be available. If there are restrictions on publicly sharing data—e.g. participant privacy or use of data from a third party—those must be specified.

Reviewer #1: Yes

Reviewer #2: No

Response: Thank you for your response. We have now revised the Data Availability statement for this study. The data used in this study was obtained from ICES. The legal restrictions and data sharing agreements prohibits ICES from making the dataset publicly available, thus, we are unable to publicly share the data that were used in this study. However, readers who are interested in accessing the linked data can access it through the ICES Data & Analytic Services (DAS). Please see the revised data availability statement indicated as part of the response to the journal requirement comment (JR1.4) indicated above.

RC1.4 Is the manuscript presented in an intelligible fashion and written in standard English?

PLOS ONE does not copyedit accepted manuscripts, so the language in submitted articles must be clear, correct, and unambiguous. Any typographical or grammatical errors should be corrected at revision, so please note any specific errors here.

Reviewer #1: Yes

Reviewer #2: Yes

Response: Thank you for your response.

RC1.5 Review Comments to the Author

Please use the space provided to explain your answers to the questions above. You may also include additional comments for the author, including concerns about dual publication, research ethics, or publication ethics. (Please upload your review as an attachment if it exceeds 20,000 characters)

REVIEWER #1:

R1.1 Abstract - In the background section, it would be helpful for a broader audience if you add some commentary on why a classification system for organizing diagnostic codes is needed- (e.g., in order to enable analyses of administrative datasets that answer important clinical and health services questions). You comment on this in the conclusion, but the rationale for conversion might be more helpful right at the beginning.

Response: Thank you for your comment. We have revised the abstract – background section according to the reviewer’s comment (Abstract, page 2, lines 28 - 31):

“A classification system that categorizes International Statistical Classification of Diseases and Related Health Problems, Tenth Revision (ICD-10) diagnosis codes into clinically meaningful categories is important for pediatric clinical and health services research using administrative data.”

R1.2.1 Introduction - Again, would be helpful to take some space here to explain that one cannot meaningfully analyze administrative datasets without such groupers because analyses cannot accommodate/run when several thousand diagnosis codes are included. By grouping them, we are able to ask important research questions using advanced observational study designs.

Response: Thank you for your comment. We have now added a few sentences in the Introduction section indicating the importance and use of having classification systems that group diagnosis codes into clinically relevant categories (Introduction, page 4, lines 67 - 74):

“The thousands of specific International Statistical Classification of Diseases and Related Health Problems, Tenth Revision, Canada (ICD-10-CA) diagnosis codes present, make it difficult to meaningfully analyze administrative data without using classification systems that map the specific codes into clinically relevant categories (e.g. pneumonia, depression). By grouping the diagnosis codes, researchers, payers, or policy makers can examine patterns in healthcare utilization and costs, develop patient cohorts for research, and answer important research questions using advanced observational study designs.”

R1.2.2 Introduction - It would also be helpful to provide some brief literature review here of examples of using PECCS or CCS to define high-priority conditions or answer helpful clinical research questions.

Response: Thank you for your comment. We have now revised the Introduction section and have cited a few studies that have used PECCS in the United States. Two studies that were cited used PECCS to classify diagnosis of pediatric inpatient hospital encounters into mutually exclusive condition categories to identify high priority conditions (based on prevalence and cost) in children’s hospitals exclusively and another using data from both children’s and general hospitals. We also included one study that identified high priority conditions in children with ambulatory surgery hospital encounters, and another study that used PECCS to classify the diverse comorbidities present among pediatric patients admitted with catatonia (Introduction, page 5, lines 97 - 102):

“In the US, PECCS has been used in studies to group diagnosis codes of pediatric hospital encounters into mutually exclusive condition categories in children’s hospitals exclusively, [12] and in general and children’s hospitals [13] to identify high priority conditions based on prevalence and costs. It has also been used to identify high priority conditions in pediatric ambulatory surgeries[14], and to classify the comorbidities present in pediatric patients hospitalized with catatonia [15].”

R1.2.3 Introduction - Need to add some background on the other classification system options available and their limitations- why do we need PECCS-CA?

Response: Thank you for your comment. We have now revised the Introduction section to add some background on the other classification system options available and why we need PECCS-CA (Introduction, pages 4 – 5, lines 76 - 88):

“There are a few existing groupers that categorize ICD-10-CA diagnosis codes into clinical categories. One of these grouping methodologies is a translation of the Clinical Classifications Software (CCS) from the United States (US) ICD-10 codes (i.e. ICD-10-CM [Clinical Modification]) to the Canadian codes.[3] In this grouping methodology, the ICD-10-CA codes were mapped to 130 clinical categories of chronic health conditions.[3] Other grouping methodologies include the ICD-10-CA chapters which classifies diseases and related health problems and contains 23 broad category chapters,[4] and the CIHI Case Mix Group (CMG) which categorizes acute care inpatients into clinically relevant groups using diagnosis and intervention codes from the patient’s hospital record.[5,6] However, limitations in these grouping methodologies such as only categorizing diagnosis codes into chronic health condition categories, or lacking important pediatric conditions prevent its’ use in pediatric health services research. To date, a classification system that categorizes ICD-10-CA diagnosis codes in health administrative data into pediatric specific, mutually exclusive categories does not exist.”

R1.3 Methods - Would be helpful to provide brief descriptions of the data sources and elements contained in each as well as how they are linked and how data quality is monitored/maintained.

Response: Thank you for your comment. We have now added some details on the data sources and elements contained within the data sources, how the data is linked at ICES, and how the data quality is monitored (Methods, page 8, lines 161 - 172):

“Datasets at ICES are linked using unique encoded identifiers known as the confidential ICES Key Number (IKN). ICES contains policies and procedures for its’ data handling practices, and every three years these policies are reviewed and approved by the Office of the Information Privacy Commissioner.[17] At ICES, a set of data standardization rules are applied to all datasets, data cleaning is conducted, the quality of data is routinely assessed and documented using the ICES’ Data Quality Framework for five different dimensions (Accuracy, Internal validity, External validity, Interpretability, and Relevance), and information about the data (e.g. data quality reports, how the data is collected) are held in an internal website on the ICES Intranet. In this study the Canadian Institute for Health Information Discharge Abstract Database (CIHI-DAD) and Same Day Surgery (SDS) database were utilized to obtain data on the inpatient and same day surgery hospital encounters including the admission date, age at admission, and the main responsible diagnosis recorded for the encounter using ICD-10-CA codes.”

R1.4 Results - The top 10 rankings seem a bit surprising and different from other prior similar analyses. Although this may be out of the scope of this analysis, it would be helpful to directly compare the results of using this grouper PECCS-CA vs CCS using the same dataset, or at least qualitatively compare the findings to such prior analyses. That would allow some more in depth assessment of the validity/success of the authors mapping process as well as potentially enable authors to directly demonstrate the advantages of this new classification system. Those would both be valuable additions to both the results and discussion.

Response: Thank you for your comment. The few studies that have conducted similar analyses identifying the top prevalent conditions were conducted using inpatient pediatric hospital encounters only, thus, making it difficult to conduct a direct comparison to our study, which additionally used ambulatory surgery encounters. However, one US study conducted by Keren et al. (2012)[10] focused on children with hospital encounters (included inpatient and ambulatory surgery) also found otitis media, hypertrophy of tonsils and adenoids, bronchiolitis, pneumonia, and dental caries within the top 10 most prevalent conditions. Although, as the reviewer mentioned, it would be helpful to directly compare the results of using PECCS-CA vs CCS using the same dataset, it is difficult to conduct such analysis. The CCS is a grouping methodology that is used to categorize the US ICD-10 codes (i.e. ICD-10-CM), while the PECCS-CA is used to categorize the Canadian version of the ICD-10 codes (i.e. ICD-10-CA). Furthermore, there are no studies that have used CCS to identify and rank the most prevalent conditions in children with hospital encounters, regardless of the diagnosis, to compare it to our current study. Nevertheless, our research letter published on the PECCS for the US ICD-10-CM codes compared the detection of conditions in PECCS versus CCS using data from children with hospital encounters from the US children’s hospitals. We showed that there was an increased specificity of detecting pediatric health conditions using PECCS compared to the CCS. Please see Gill et al. (2021)[7] for the comparison between PECCS and CCS. If the CCS was able to be used in our current study to identify the most prevalent conditions in children, important pediatric conditions such as bronchiolitis, neonatal hyperbilirubinemia, and transient tachypnea of newborn would have been missed. We have revised the discussion section to include the above mentioned points (Discussion, pages 17-18, lines 285 - 300):

“The CCS is a grouper used to classify the ICD-10-CM codes into clinically meaningful categories,[9] and the beta version (2019.1) of the CCS was used to develop the original PECCS for the ICD-10-CM codes.[7,8] The beta version of the CCS categorized more than 70,000 ICD-10-CM diagnosis codes into 283 clinical categories.[21] The utility of PECCS-CA was not compared to the CCS using the same hospital encounter dataset due to the differences in the ICD-10 coding systems. However, we previously compared the original PECCS’s ability to detect pediatric conditions with the CCS using pediatric hospitalization data from the US.[7] The PECCS demonstrated increased specificity of detecting pediatric health conditions. For instance, 13,261 pediatric hospital encounters in the US were classified into miscellaneous mental health disorders using CCS, while the same encounters were classified into the following when PECCS was used: miscellaneous mental health disorders (5,357 encounters), anorexia nervosa (4,709 encounters), conversion disorder (2,979 encounters), and bulimia nervosa (216 encounters).[7] If the CCS was able to be applied to our current dataset, important pediatric conditions including bronchiolitis, neonatal hyperbilirubinemia, and transient tachypnea of newborn would not have been detected. This further demonstrates the importance of PECCS-CA for pediatric health services research in Canada.”

REVIEWER #2:

R2.1 This cross-sectional study used a rational, stepwise approach to map ICD-10-CA codes onto ICD-10-CM codes to adapt the US-based PECCS classification system to Canadian settings. The study is an important contribution to pediatric health services research since it will allow for research that is specific to child health in Canada. The authors’ newly developed PECCS-CA classification system will be publicly available, which will be very helpful to pediatric health services researchers tracking healthcare utilization, cost, and outcomes in Canada. I have no major or minor concerns about this manuscript – it is clearly written and the discussion does a good job providing context for why development of this pediatric-specific and country-specific classification system is important.

Although authors are not able to make the data used for this research publicly available, they provide a reasonable answer for why this is the case.

Response: Thank you very much for your comments.

RC1.6 PLOS authors have the option to publish the peer review history of their article (what does this mean?). If published, this will include your full peer review and any attached files.

If you choose “no”, your identity will remain anonymous but your review may still be made public.

Do you want your identity to be public for this peer review? For information about this choice, including consent withdrawal, please see our Privacy Policy.

Reviewer #1: No

Reviewer #2: No

Response: Thank you for your response.

Attachment

Submitted filename: Response to Reviewers.docx

Decision Letter 1

Jiangtao Gou

11 Aug 2022

Pediatric Clinical Classification System for use in Canadian inpatient settings

PONE-D-22-13110R1

Dear Dr. Gill,

We’re pleased to inform you that your manuscript has been judged scientifically suitable for publication and will be formally accepted for publication once it meets all outstanding technical requirements.

Within one week, you’ll receive an e-mail detailing the required amendments. When these have been addressed, you’ll receive a formal acceptance letter and your manuscript will be scheduled for publication.

An invoice for payment will follow shortly after the formal acceptance. To ensure an efficient process, please log into Editorial Manager at http://www.editorialmanager.com/pone/, click the 'Update My Information' link at the top of the page, and double check that your user information is up-to-date. If you have any billing related questions, please contact our Author Billing department directly at authorbilling@plos.org.

If your institution or institutions have a press office, please notify them about your upcoming paper to help maximize its impact. If they’ll be preparing press materials, please inform our press team as soon as possible -- no later than 48 hours after receiving the formal acceptance. Your manuscript will remain under strict press embargo until 2 pm Eastern Time on the date of publication. For more information, please contact onepress@plos.org.

Kind regards,

Jiangtao Gou, Ph.D.

Academic Editor

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Reviewer #2: Yes

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Reviewer #2: Yes

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Reviewer #2: Yes

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Reviewer #1: The revision was very responsive to my comments. Thank you very much for all your hard work on the edits!

Reviewer #2: The authors have adequately addressed all of the comments in their response to reviewers. I have no additional concerns.

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Reviewer #1: No

Reviewer #2: No

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Acceptance letter

Jiangtao Gou

16 Aug 2022

PONE-D-22-13110R1

Pediatric Clinical Classification System for use in Canadian inpatient settings

Dear Dr. Gill:

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Kind regards,

PLOS ONE Editorial Office Staff

on behalf of

Dr. Jiangtao Gou

Academic Editor

PLOS ONE

Associated Data

    This section collects any data citations, data availability statements, or supplementary materials included in this article.

    Supplementary Materials

    S1 Data. PECCS-CA for ICD-10-CA codes (update—February 09, 2022).

    (XLSX)

    Attachment

    Submitted filename: Review_PONE-D-22-13110.docx

    Attachment

    Submitted filename: Response to Reviewers.docx

    Data Availability Statement

    The dataset for this study is held securely in coded form at ICES. The ICES is a prescribed entity under the Ontario’s Personal Health Information Privacy Act (PHIPA). As a prescribed entity, ICES is allowed to collect personally identifiable information for analysis that evaluate, plan, and/or monitor the health care system or for analysis related to the health or safety of the public without receiving individual consent. While legal data sharing agreements between ICES and data providers (e.g., healthcare organizations and government) prohibit ICES from making the dataset publicly available, access may be granted to those who meet pre-specified criteria for confidential access, available at www.ices.on.ca/DAS (email: das@ices.on.ca). Details on submitting a request form to access the data is found in the following hyperlink (https://www.ices.on.ca/DAS/Submitting-your-request). The full dataset creation plan is available from the authors upon request.


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