Background and Objectives: Ascites is associated with substantial symptom burden and increased healthcare utilization, and it is observed in patients with advanced disease across multiple etiologies. However, because ascites is a clinical sign rather than a diagnosis category, it can be challenging to study using routine health reporting. In routinely collected hospital administrative data, ascites is commonly captured using International Classification of Diseases, Tenth Revision (ICD-10) code R18, an etiologically non-specific classification whose outcome implications are less documented. We aimed to evaluate the incremental association of R18-coded ascites with length of stay (LOS), readmission burden, and in-hospital mortality in the Gastroenterology and Internal Medicine inpatient department, beyond comorbidity burden and other coded decompensation proxies. Materials and Methods: We conducted a single-center retrospective study using routinely collected administrative discharge data from adult inpatient admissions (2015–2023) in the Gastroenterology and Internal Medicine department of a Romanian tertiary-care hospital. Admissions were classified by the presence of ICD-10 R18-coded ascites. Outcomes were LOS, readmission burden (count of subsequent admissions), and in-hospital mortality. Multivariable models adjusted for age, sex, and comorbidity burden (Charlson Comorbidity Index), with additional models incorporating ICD-10-derived decompensation proxies to assess overlap in administrative severity signal. LOS was further examined within Charlson strata to evaluate incremental stratification. Results: Coded ascites was associated with higher hospital burden, including longer LOS and greater readmission burden, and with higher in-hospital mortality in partially adjusted models. Within each CCI stratum, LOS remained higher among admissions with R18-coded ascites, supporting incremental stratification beyond comorbidity alone. Furthermore, mobility impairment was an important predictor of LOS. Age-stratified analyses suggested a high-burden phenotype among younger patients and infrequent R18 coding among the very elderly in this cohort. Conclusions: These findings support the potential utility of R18-coded ascites as a pragmatic administrative marker for risk adjustment and service planning.
Baboi et al. (Tue,) studied this question.