| Literature DB >> 25786208 |
Eric T Roberts1, Aaron Horne2, Seth S Martin2, Michael J Blaha2, Ron Blankstein3, Matthew J Budoff4, Christopher Sibley5, Joseph F Polak6, Kevin D Frick7, Roger S Blumenthal2, Khurram Nasir8.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The Multi-Ethnic Study of Atherosclerosis (MESA) showed that the addition of coronary artery calcium (CAC) to traditional risk factors improves risk classification, particularly in intermediate risk asymptomatic patients with LDL cholesterol levels <160 mg/dL. However, the cost-effectiveness of incorporating CAC into treatment decision rules has yet to be clearly delineated.Entities:
Mesh:
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Year: 2015 PMID: 25786208 PMCID: PMC4364761 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0116377
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Fig 1Schematic of the risk assessment and treatment strategies compared.
* Patients with 1≤CAC<100 are advised to initiate standard statin therapy, which is assumed to provide a mean 35% reduction in the relative risk of CVD events. Patients with CAC≥100 are advised to begin intensive therapy, which provides a mean 45% reduction in the relative risk of CVD events.
Model Parameters.
| Parameters: Probabilities and characteristics of Reclassification Groups | Base-Case Value / Mean | Distribution | Ref # |
|---|---|---|---|
| Probabilities | |||
| Person-Year Risk of CVD Event, CAC = 0 | 0.00406206 (0.00413593) | Beta (approximated from the mean annual event rate) |
|
| Person-Year Risk of CVD Event, 1≤CAC<100 | 0.01086766 (0.01115809) | Beta |
|
| Person-Year Risk of CVD Event, CAC≥100 | 0.01920450 (0.02060006) | Beta |
|
| Person-Year Risk of CHD Event, CAC = 0 | 0.00201915 (0.00212544) | Beta |
|
| Person-Year Risk of CHD Event, 1≤CAC<100 | 0.00839575 (0.00756866) | Beta |
|
| Person-Year Risk of CHD Event, CAC≥100 | 0.01676953 (0.01639898) | Beta |
|
| RR of CHD/CVD Event, Normal dose of statins | .6500 | Triangular (min: .55, likeliest: .65, max: .75) | Expert opinion |
| RR of CHD/CVD Event, High dose of statins | .5500 | Triangular (min: .45, likeliest: .55, max: .65) | Expert opinion |
| Probability of death from CHD Event, age < 65 | .10000 | Beta (alpha: 17, beta:153) | Lee et al. [ |
| Probability of death from CHD Event, age ≥65 | .15714 | Beta (alpha: 22, beta: 118) | Lee et al. [ |
| Probability of death from CVD Event, age < 65 | .10260 | Beta (alpha: 16, beta: 140) | Lee et al. [ |
| Probability of death from CVD Event, age ≥65 | .16265 | Beta (alpha: 23, beta: 118) | Lee et al. [ |
| Probability of Mortality from Non-CHD/Non-CVD Events | US Life Table | CDC National Vital Statistics [ | |
| Probability of Mild Adverse Effect from Statins | 0.1800 | Beta (alpha: 252, beta: 1148) | Lee et al. [ |
| Probability of Severe Adverse Effect from Statins | 1:18000 person-years | Beta (alpha: 5.6, beta: 99994) | Lee et al. [ |
| Probability of Death Given Severe Adverse Reaction | 0.0900 | Beta (alpha: 7.2, beta: 73) | Lee et al. [ |
| Probability of Statin Adherence, No CAC Testing | 0.5500 | Triangular (min: .40, likeliest: .55, max: 1) | Shah [ |
| Probability of Statin Adherence, CAC Testing | 0.6500 | Triangular (min: .50, likeliest: .65, max: 1) | Shah [ |
| Lifetime Cancer Risk Due to CT-Scanning Caused Radiation Exposure | 0.00002 | No distribution modeled | vanKempen [ |
| 1-year case fatality given cancer due to radiation risk | 0.6500 | No distribution modeled | vanKempen [ |
| Direct Medical Costs ($US 2011) | |||
| Direct Medical Costs for Non-Fatal CHD Events | $64,400.00 | Gamma (mean: $64,400; sd: $32,200) | Weighted average of condition-specific 1-year direct medical costs, where myocardial infarctions account for 49.5% of events, angina pectoris 42.6%, and Resuscitated cardiac arrests 7.9% of events; Sources: O'Sullivan, Bureau of Labor Statistics, and Bank of Canada [ |
| Direct Medical Costs for Fatal CHD Events | $49,000.00 | Gamma (mean: $49,000; sd: $24,500) | Weighted average of condition-specific 3-year direct medical costs, where myocardial infarctions account for 49.5% of events, angina pectoris 42.6%, and Resuscitated cardiac arrests 7.9% of events; Sources: O'Sullivan, Bureau of Labor Statistics, and Bank of Canada [ |
| Direct Medical Costs for Non-Fatal CVD Events | $55,700.00 | Gamma (mean: $55,700; sd: $27,850) | Weighted average of condition-specific 1-year direct medical costs, where stroke accounts for 25.7% of events, myocardial infarction 36.8%, angina pectoris 31.6%, and Resuscitated cardiac arrests 5.9% of events; Sources: O'Sullivan, Bureau of Labor Statistics, and Bank of Canada [ |
| Direct Medical Costs for Fatal CVD Events | $43,500.00 | Gamma (mean: $43,500; sd: $21,750) | Weighted average of condition-specific 1-year direct medical costs, where stroke accounts for 25.7% of events, myocardial infarction 36.8%, angina pectoris 31.6%, and Resuscitated cardiac arrests 5.9% of events; Sources: O'Sullivan, Bureau of Labor Statistics, and Bank of Canada [ |
| Cost of CAC Testing | $75.00, $100.00, and $150.00 | Triangular (min: 80% of baseline; max: 120% of baseline) | vanKempen [ |
| Annual cost of statins (both intense and normal dose) | $50.00, $180.00, and $1,000.00 | Triangular (min: 80% of baseline; max: 120% of baseline) | Pletcher et al. [ |
| Cost of Statin Complications (mild) | $180.00 | Gamma (mean: $180; sd: $30) | Extrapolated from Lee et al. [ |
| Cost of Statin Complications (severe) | $6,500.00 | Gamma (mean: $6,500, sd: $3,250) | Lee et al. [ |
| Total cost of follow-up for incidental non-cardiac abnormalities (incidentaolmoas) | $250.00 | Gamma (mean: $250, sd: $125) | MacHaalany et al. [ |
| Indirect Medical Costs | |||
|
| |||
| Age 40 | $6,500.00 | Gamma (mean: $6,500; sd: $3,250) | Weighted average of condition-specific productivity costs, where myocardial infarction accounts for 49.5% of events, angina pectoris 42.6%, and Resuscitated cardiac arrests account for 7.9% of events; Source: Grover [ |
| Age 50 | 5,100.00 | Gamma (mean: $3,100; sd: $1,550) | Source: Grover [ |
| Age 60 | 1,900.00 | Gamma (mean: $1,900; sd: $800) | Source: Grover [ |
| Age 70 | 500.00 | Gamma (mean: $500; sd: $250) | Source: Grover [ |
| Age 80 | 200.00 | Gamma (mean: $200; sd: $100) | Source: Grover [ |
| Time Cost of CAC Testing (assumed to be 1 hour) | 15.20 | Gamma (alpha: 1.056 lambda: .152) | Bureau of Labor Statistics [ |
|
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| Health Utility Values | |||
|
| |||
| Age 50 | 0.8400 | No distribution modeled | Lee et al. [ |
| Age 60 | 0.8200 | No distribution modeled | Lee et al. [ |
| Age 70 | 0.7900 | No distribution modeled | Lee et al. [ |
| Age 80 | 0.7400 | No distribution modeled | Lee et al. [ |
| Age 90 | 0.6800 | No distribution modeled | Lee et al. [ |
|
| |||
|
| |||
| General Disutility from Taking Statin | 0.99616 | Triangular (min: 0.99232, likeliest: 0.99616, max: 1.000) | Pletcher et al. [ |
| Mild Statin Complications (Annual health utility loss) | 0.9941 | Triangular (min: 0.9986, likeliest: 0.9941, max: 0.9890) | Lee et al. [ |
| Severe Statin Complications (Annual health utility loss) | 0.9553 | Triangular (min: 0.9808, likeliest: 0.9553, max: 0.9233) | Lee et al. [ |
| Nonfatal CHD Event (Annual health utility loss) | 0.8351 | Beta (alpha: 102, beta: 20) | Weighted average of CHD condition-specific health utility losses, obtained from Lee et al. [ |
| Nonfatal CVD Event (Annual health utility loss) | 0.8272 | Beta (alpha: 180, beta: 38) | Weighted average of CVD condition-specific health utility losses, obtained from Lee et al. [ |
| No Statin Complications | 1.0000 | N/A | - |
| Death | 0.0000 | N/A | - |
Re-Classification of ATP III Assessed Statin Eligibility by CAC.
| Risk as Assessed by CAC (Assumed Gold Standard) | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Risks as Assessed by ATP III | Highest Risk | At Risk | Not at Risk | Total | |
| CAC ≥ 100 | 1 ≤ CAC < 100 | CAC = 0 | (All CAC Groups) | ||
|
| |||||
| N | 193 | 196 | 226 | 615 | |
| % of Total Population | 11.9% | 12.1% | 14.0% | ||
|
| |||||
| N | 256 | 294 | 454 | 1,004 | |
| % of Total Population | 15.8% | 18.2% | 28.0% | ||
|
| |||||
| Total (All ATP III Groups): | 449 | 490 | 680 | 1,619 | |
|
| |||||
|
| |||||
| % of Population Reclassified as At Risk or Highest Risk via CAC: | 34.0% | ||||
| % of Population Reclassified as Not At Risk or Highest Risk via CAC: | 14.0% | ||||
| Net % Reclassification to At Risk or Highest Risk via CAC: | 20.0% | ||||
|
| |||||
| % of Population Reclassified as Highest Risk via CAC: | 15.8% | ||||
| % of Population Reclassified as Not Highest Risk via CAC: | 26.1% | ||||
| Net % Reclassification to At Highest Risk via CAC: | −10.3% | ||||
Note: Authors’ calculations from the Multi-Ethnic Study of Atherosclerosis.
Averted CHD and CVD Events Per 1,000 Persons, Base-Case MESA Event Rates.
| ATP III (Events) | Treat All (Δ Events, Compared to ATP III) | CAC* (Δ Events, Compared to ATP III) | |
|---|---|---|---|
| 5 Years | |||
| CHD Events | 31.7 | 27.9 Δ = −3.9) | 26.7 Δ = −5.1) |
| CVD Events | 40.8 | 35.7 Δ = −5.1) | 35.0 Δ = −5.8) |
| 10 Years | |||
| CHD Events | 52.3 | 46.1 Δ = −6.2) | 44.5 Δ = −7.9) |
| CVD Events | 72.7 | 64.0 Δ = −8.6) | 62.9 Δ = −9.8) |
Note: Simulated events per 1,000 persons, by risk assessment and treatment strategy. The results displayed in this table value outcomes in terms of averted events, but not QALYs. Results reflect all base-case model assumptions and 1x MESA event rates.
* Column displays results for the scenario where patients with CAC≥1 are advised to initiate statins (intensive therapy for CAC≥100, and standard therapy for 1≤CAC<100).
Results Using Base-Case MESA Event Rates.
| Scenario | Mean CAC Scan Cost ($) | Mean Annual Statin Cost ($) | Time Horizon (years) | Treat CAC≥100 | Valuation of Outcomes | Decision |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| CHD Events | ||||||
| 1 | 100 | 180 | 5 | No | Events | CAC Dominates Both |
| 2 | 100 | 180 | 5 | No | QALYs | CAC Dominates Both |
| 3 | 100 | 180 | 5 | Yes | Events | Treat All Dominates ATP III |
| 4 | 100 | 180 | 5 | Yes | QALYs | CAC Dominates Both |
| 5 | 100 | 180 | 10 | No | Events | CAC Dominates Both |
| 6 | 100 | 180 | 10 | No | QALYs | CAC Dominates Both |
| 7 | 100 | 180 | 10 | Yes | Events | Treat All Cost-Effective; ICER = $4,373 |
| 8 | 100 | 180 | 10 | Yes | QALYs | CAC Dominates |
| Sensitivity Analyses on Cost Parameters | ||||||
| 9 | 100 | 50 | 5 | No | Events | CAC Dominates Both |
| 10 | 100 | 50 | 5 | No | QALYs | CAC Dominates Both |
| 11 | 100 | 1,000 | 5 | No | QALYs | ATP III (Status Quo) |
| 12 | 100 | 1,000 | 5 | Yes | QALYs | CAC Dominates Both |
| 13 | 75 | 180 | 5 | No | QALYs | CAC Dominates Both |
| 14 | 75 | 180 | 5 | Yes | QALYs | CAC Dominates Both |
| 15 | 150 | 180 | 5 | No | QALYs | CAC Dominates Both |
| 16 | 150 | 180 | 5 | Yes | QALYs | CAC Dominates Both |
| 17 | 250 | 180 | 5 | No | QALYs | ATP III (Status Quo) |
| 18 | Base-Case Assumptions + Indirect Costs & Incidentalomas (QALYs) | CAC Dominates Both | ||||
| CVD Events | ||||||
| 19 | 100 | 180 | 5 | No | Events | CAC Dominates Both |
| 20 | 100 | 180 | 5 | No | QALYs | CAC Dominates Both |
| 21 | 100 | 180 | 5 | Yes | Events | Treat All Dominates ATP III |
| 22 | 100 | 180 | 5 | Yes | QALYs | CAC Dominates Both |
| 23 | 100 | 180 | 10 | No | Events | CAC Dominates Both |
| 24 | 100 | 180 | 10 | No | QALYs | CAC Dominates Both |
| 25 | 100 | 180 | 10 | Yes | Events | Treat All Dominates ATP III |
| 26 | 100 | 180 | 10 | Yes | QALYs | CAC Dominates Both |
| Sensitivity Analyses on Cost Parameters | ||||||
| 27 | 100 | 50 | 5 | No | Events | CAC Dominates ATP III |
| 28 | 100 | 50 | 5 | No | QALYs | CAC Dominates ATP III |
| 29 | 100 | 1,000 | 5 | No | QALYs | ATP III (Status Quo) |
| 30 | 100 | 1,000 | 5 | Yes | QALYs | CAC Dominates Both |
| 31 | 75 | 180 | 5 | No | QALYs | CAC Dominates Both |
| 32 | 75 | 180 | 5 | Yes | QALYs | CAC Dominates Both |
| 33 | 150 | 180 | 5 | No | QALYs | CAC Dominates Both |
| 34 | 150 | 180 | 5 | Yes | QALYs | CAC Dominates ATP III |
| 35 | 250 | 180 | 5 | No | QALYs | ATP III (Status Quo) |
| 36 | Base-Case Assumptions + Indirect Costs & Incidentalomas (QALYs) | CAC Dominates Both | ||||
Note: A risk assessment and treatment strategy is said to dominate if it is less costly and more effective than both of the alternative strategies to which it is compared. Otherwise, the favored strategy may be incrementally more costly and more effective than ATP III, which was the standard of risk assessment when this study was conducted. If the incremental cost per unit of effect is less than or equal to $50,000, but positive, the alternative intervention is assumed to be favored, and an incremental cost-effectiveness ratio (ICER) is reported. If the ICER exceeds $50,000, ATP III is preferred. Mean costs and effects for each strategy, which are the basis for the decisions summarized in the table, are presented in S2 Table. Scenarios are identified by the scenario number on each row of the table.
Sensitivity Analysis on Event Rate Parameters—2x MESA Event Rates.
| Scenario | Mean CAC Scan Cost ($) | Mean Annual Statin Cost ($) | Time Horizon (years) | Treat CAC≥100 | Valuation of Outcomes | Decision |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| CHD Events | ||||||
| 37 | 100 | 180 | 5 | No | Events | CAC Dominates Both |
| 38 | 100 | 180 | 5 | No | QALYs | CAC Dominates Both |
| 39 | 100 | 180 | 5 | Yes | Events | Treat All Dominates ATP III |
| 40 | 100 | 180 | 5 | Yes | QALYs | CAC Dominates Both |
| 41 | 100 | 180 | 10 | No | Events | CAC Dominates Both |
| 42 | 100 | 180 | 10 | No | QALYs | CAC Dominates Both |
| 43 | 100 | 180 | 10 | Yes | Events | Treat All Dominates ATP III |
| 44 | 100 | 180 | 10 | Yes | QALYs | CAC Dominates Both |
| CVD Events | ||||||
| 45 | 100 | 180 | 5 | No | Events | CAC Dominates Both |
| 46 | 100 | 180 | 5 | No | QALYs | CAC Dominates Both |
| 47 | 100 | 180 | 5 | Yes | Events | Treat All Dominates ATP III |
| 48 | 100 | 180 | 5 | Yes | QALYs | CAC Dominates ATP III |
| 49 | 100 | 180 | 10 | No | Events | CAC Dominates Both |
| 50 | 100 | 180 | 10 | No | QALYs | CAC Dominates Both |
| 51 | 100 | 180 | 10 | Yes | Events | Treat All Dominates Both |
| 52 | 100 | 180 | 10 | Yes | QALYs | CAC Dominates ATP III |
Note: A risk assessment and treatment strategy is said to dominate if it is less costly and more effective than both of the alternative strategies to which it is compared. Otherwise, the favored strategy may be incrementally more costly and more effective than ATP III, which was the standard of risk assessment when this study was conducted. If the incremental cost per unit of effect is less than or equal to $50,000, the alternative intervention is assumed to be favored, and an incremental cost-effectiveness ratio (ICER) is reported. If the ICER exceeds $50,000, but is positive, then ATP III is preferred. Mean costs and effects for each scenario, which are the basis for the decisions summarized in the table, are presented in S3 Table. Scenarios are identified by the scenario number on each row of the table.
Fig 2Cost-Effectiveness Acceptability Curves.
Panel (a): 10-Year CVD Events, Treat CAC ≥ 1. Panel (b): 10-Year CVD Events, Treat CAC ≥ 100. Note: The cost-effectiveness acceptability curves show the proportion of simulations (vertical axis) that are cost-effective at a given willingness-to-pay threshold (horizontal axis). A mean CAC scanning cost of $100 and a mean statin cost of $180 is assumed in both plots (indirect costs and costs associated with incidentalomas are not included). The vertical intercept of each cost-effectiveness acceptability curve includes simulations that are cost saving and which result in a loss of fewer QALYs compared to the alternative scenarios. The intercept can be interpreted as the probability that a strategy would be accepted at a willingness-to-pay threshold of $0/QALY. For example, approximately 75% of simulations in both CAC strategies would be accepted at the $0/QALY threshold.