A1 Refereed original research article in a scientific journal

Cost-effectiveness analysis of stand-alone or combined non-invasive imaging tests for the diagnosis of stable coronary artery disease: results from the EVINCI study




AuthorsLorenzoni V., Bellelli S., Caselli C., Knuuti J., Underwood S.R., Neglia D., Turchetti G., Pietila M., Mäki M., Teresinska A., Aguadé-Bruix S., Pizzi M.N., Todiere G., Gimelli A., Lombardi M., Puzzuoli S., Mangione M., Marcheschi P., Schroeder S., Drosch T., Poddighe R., Casolo G., Anagnostopoulos C., Pugliese F., Rouzet F., Le Guludec D., Cappelli F., Valente S., Gensini G.F., Zawaideh C., Capitanio S., Sambuceti G., Marsico F., Filardi P.P., Fernández-Golfín C., Rincón L.M., Zamorano J.L., Graner F.P., Nekolla S., de Graaf M.A., Scholte A.J.H.A., Fiechter M., Stehli J., Gaemperli O., Kaufmann P.A., Reyes E., Nkomo S., Carpeggiani C., Giannessi D., Mariani F., Marinelli M., Sicari R.; For the EVINCI Investigators

PublisherSpringer Verlag

Publication year2019

JournalEuropean Journal of Health Economics

Journal name in sourceEuropean Journal of Health Economics

Volume20

Issue9

First page 1437

Last page1449

Number of pages13

ISSN1618-7598

DOIhttps://doi.org/10.1007/s10198-019-01096-5

Web address https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s10198-019-01096-5

Self-archived copy’s web addresshttps://research.utu.fi/converis/portal/detail/Publication/42289373


Abstract

Aim: This study aimed at evaluating the cost-effectiveness of different non-invasive imaging-guided strategies for the diagnosis of obstructive coronary artery disease (CAD) in a European population of patients from the Evaluation of Integrated Cardiac Imaging in Ischemic Heart Disease (EVINCI) study.

Methods and results: Cost-effectiveness analysis was performed in 350 patients (209 males, mean age 59 ± 9 years) with symptoms of suspected stable CAD undergoing computed tomography coronary angiography (CTCA) and at least one cardiac imaging stress-test prior to invasive coronary angiography (ICA) and in whom imaging exams were analysed at dedicated core laboratories. Stand-alone stress-tests or combined non-invasive strategies, when the first exam was uncertain, were compared. The diagnostic end-point was obstructive CAD defined as > 50% stenosis at quantitative ICA in the left main or at least one major coronary vessel. Effectiveness was defined as the percentage of correct diagnosis (cd) and costs were calculated using country-specific reimbursements. Incremental cost-effectiveness ratios (ICERs) were obtained using per-patient data and considering “no-imaging” as reference. The overall prevalence of obstructive CAD was 28%. Strategies combining CTCA followed by stress ECHO, SPECT, PET, or stress CMR fol
lowed by CTCA, were all cost-effective. ICERs values indicated cost saving from − 969€/cd for CMR-CTCA to − 1490€/cd for CTCA-PET, − 3,09 €/cd for CTCA-SPECT and − 3776€/cd for CTCA-ECHO. Similarly when considering early revascularization as effectiveness measure.

Conclusion: In patients with suspected stable CAD and low prevalence of disease, combined non-invasive strategies with CTCA and stress-imaging are cost-effective as gatekeepers to ICA and to select candidates for early revascularization.


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