AI Article Synopsis

  • This study evaluates the cost-effectiveness of cardiovascular magnetic resonance (CMR) compared to other imaging methods for diagnosing significant coronary artery disease (CAD), aiming to improve understanding of its value in healthcare.
  • Researchers searched existing studies to create a cost-effectiveness calculator that estimates the quality-adjusted life years (QALY) and lifetime costs associated with CMR versus alternatives like SPECT and CCTA.
  • Results indicate that CMR is often a cost-effective option for diagnosing CAD, being preferable in 10 out of 15 studies, while also showing that CCTA may not be cost-effective in the US when considering the latest imaging performance data.

Article Abstract

Background: Although prior reports have evaluated the clinical and cost impacts of cardiovascular magnetic resonance (CMR) for low-to-intermediate-risk patients with suspected significant coronary artery disease (CAD), the cost-effectiveness of CMR compared to relevant comparators remains poorly understood. We aimed to summarize the cost-effectiveness literature on CMR for CAD and create a cost-effectiveness calculator, useable worldwide, to approximate the cost-per-quality-adjusted-life-year (QALY) of CMR and relevant comparators with context-specific patient-level and system-level inputs.

Methods: We searched the Tufts Cost-Effectiveness Analysis Registry and PubMed for cost-per-QALY or cost-per-life-year-saved studies of CMR to detect significant CAD. We also developed a linear regression meta-model (CMR Cost-Effectiveness Calculator) based on a larger CMR cost-effectiveness simulation model that can approximate CMR lifetime discount cost, QALY, and cost effectiveness compared to relevant comparators [such as single-photon emission computed tomography (SPECT), coronary computed tomography angiography (CCTA)] or invasive coronary angiography.

Results: CMR was cost-effective for evaluation of significant CAD (either health-improving and cost saving or having a cost-per-QALY or cost-per-life-year result lower than the cost-effectiveness threshold) versus its relevant comparator in 10 out of 15 studies, with 3 studies reporting uncertain cost effectiveness, and 2 studies showing CCTA was optimal. Our cost-effectiveness calculator showed that CCTA was not cost-effective in the US compared to CMR when the most recent publications on imaging performance were included in the model.

Conclusions: Based on current world-wide evidence in the literature, CMR usually represents a cost-effective option compared to relevant comparators to assess for significant CAD.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8734365PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s12968-021-00833-1DOI Listing

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