| Literature DB >> 28446943 |
Alastair J Moss1, Michelle C Williams1, David E Newby1, Edward D Nicol2.
Abstract
PURPOSE OF REVIEW: Cost-effective care pathways are integral to delivering sustainable healthcare programmes. Due to the overestimation of coronary artery disease using traditional risk tables, non-invasive testing has been utilised to improve risk stratification and initiate appropriate management to reduce the dependence on invasive investigations. In line with recent technological improvements, cardiac CT is a modality that offers a detailed anatomical assessment of coronary artery disease comparable to invasive coronary angiography. RECENTEntities:
Keywords: Angina; Chest pain; Coronary artery disease; Coronary computed tomography angiography
Year: 2017 PMID: 28446943 PMCID: PMC5368205 DOI: 10.1007/s12410-017-9412-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Curr Cardiovasc Imaging Rep ISSN: 1941-9074
Fig. 1NICE cost-effectiveness analysis of diagnostic tests in 45% pre-test likelihood population. [14]. The figure plots the average proportion of correct diagnoses (effectiveness) versus the average cost (£ sterling) of each testing strategy. A first-line testing strategy using CT coronary angiography has the lowest cost per correct diagnosis of coronary artery disease. The cost-effectiveness frontier is represented by a line connecting no testing, CT coronary angiography, and invasive coronary angiography. All other testing strategies lie beneath this line and have fewer correct diagnoses at a higher cost
Anatomical-guided strategy using cardiac CT in a combined cohort of over 14,000 patients
| SCOT-HEART and PROMISE trials | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Study | SCOT-HEART | PROMISE | ||
| Population | 4146 patients | 10,003 patients | ||
| Randomisation | 1:1 | 1:1 | ||
| Intervention | CTCA in addition to standard care | CTCA versus functional test | ||
| Control | Standard care | Functional test | ||
| Primary outcome | Certainty of diagnosis of angina due to coronary heart disease at 6 weeks | All cause mortality, non-fatal MI, hospitalisation for unstable angina, major procedural complications | ||
| CTCA ( | Standard care ( | CTCA ( | Functional test ( | |
| CAD, >50% stenosis ( | 42% (752) | – | 10.3% (517) | – |
| All-cause death/non-fatal MIa (n) | 1.9% (39) | 2.7% (55) | 2.1% (104) | 2.2% (112) |
| Cardiac death/non-fatal MIa b | 1.3% (26) | 2.0% (42) | – | – |
| Non-fatal MIa ( | 1.1% (22) | 1.7% (35) | 0.6% (30) | 0.8% (40) |
| Revascularisation ( | 11.2% (233) | 9.7% (201) | 6.2% (311) | 3.2% (158) |
| Cardiac death/non-fatal MI in revascularisation group ( | 8% (18) | 14% (28) | – | – |
aSCOT-HEART median follow-up 1.7 years, PROMISE median follow-up 2 years
bSCOT-HEART hazard ratio 0.62, 95% confidence interval 0.38–1.01, p = 0.0527