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Clinical and economic impact of extracardiac lesions on coronary CT angiography. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • A study was conducted on coronary CT angiography (CCTA) over eight years to see how incidental findings outside the heart affect treatment, costs, and overall resource use.
  • Out of 4340 patients, 15.8% had significant extracardiac abnormalities, mainly lung nodules, with very few requiring treatment, though 42.5% were followed up on.
  • The financial analysis revealed that the costs of reporting and follow-up for these findings were substantial, suggesting that the current approach to assessing extracardiac structures during CCTA needs to be reevaluated, especially in healthcare settings with limited resources.

Article Abstract

Objective: When reporting coronary CT angiography (CCTA), extracardiac structures are routinely assessed, usually on a wide field-of-view (FOV) reconstruction. We performed a retrospective observational cross-sectional study to investigate the impact of incidental extracardiac abnormalities on resource utilisation and treatment, and cost-effectiveness.

Methods: All patients undergoing CCTA at a single institution between January 2012 and March 2020 were identified. The indication for CCTA was chest pain or dyspnoea in >90%. Patients with ≥1 significant extracardiac findings were selected. Clinical follow-up, investigations and treatment were documented, and costs were calculated.

Results: 4340 patients underwent CCTA; 717 extracardiac abnormalities were identified in 687 individuals (15.8%; age 62±12 years; male 336, 49%). The abnormality was already known in 162 (23.6%). Lung nodules and cysts were the most common abnormalities (296, 43.1%). Clinical and/or imaging follow-up was pursued in 292 patients (42.5%). Treatment was required by 14 patients (0.3% of the entire population), including lung resection for adenocarcinoma in six (0.1%). All but two abnormalities (both adenocarcinomas) were identifiable on the limited cardiac FOV. The cost of reporting (£20) and follow-up (£33) of extracardiac abnormalities was £53 per patient. The cost per discounted quality-adjusted life year was £23 930, increasing to £46 674 for reporting the wide FOV rather than the cardiac FOV alone.

Conclusions: Extracardiac abnormalities are common on CCTA, but identification and follow-up are costly. The few requiring treatment are usually identifiable without review of the wide FOV. The way in which CCTAs are scrutinised for extracardiac abnormalities in a resource-limited healthcare system should be questioned.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/heartjnl-2021-320698DOI Listing

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