| Literature DB >> 31720176 |
Joshua Boster1, Robert Hull2, Michael U Williams3, Jeremy Berger4, Alec Sharp2, Emilio Fentanes5, Christopher Maroules6, Ricardo Cury7, Dustin Thomas2.
Abstract
Introduction The coronary artery disease-reporting and data system (CAD-RADS) was developed to standardize communication of per-patient maximal stenosis and provide treatment recommendations that may affect downstream testing. Methods Downstream testing, cardiology referral, and cost were abstracted for 1,796 consecutive patients undergoing coronary CT angiography (CCTA) before and after the adoption of the CAD-RADS reporting template at a single-center closed referral hospital system. Cost analysis was based on direct invasive and non-invasive testing utilizing the Center for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) outpatient prospective payment system (OPPS) final rule for 2018. Results Baseline cardiovascular risk factors were balanced between the groups. Overall, referrals for downstream testing were similar between cohorts (10.7% vs 10.8%; p = 0.939). Referral for downstream testing was reduced in the CAD-RADS 1 & 2 cohort compared to non-obstructive coronary artery disease (CAD) by non-standardized reporting (NSR; 5.1% vs 14.4%, p < 0.001). This was offset by more non-diagnostic scans in the CAD-RADS cohort (9.7% vs 4.2%, p < 0.001), resulting in increased downstream testing (28.8% vs 11.4%, p = 0.038). Overall, cardiology referral rates by primary care providers (PCPs) were similar between the groups (12.2% vs 15.8%, p = 0.197). Cardiology referral rates were increased among patients with non-obstructive CAD in the NSR cohort compared with CAD-RADS 1 & 2 patients (20.5% vs 8.6%, p = 0.021). Referrals for invasive coronary angiography were low in both groups overall (3.5% vs 3.2%, p = 0.726). Median downstream testing costs were similar between the groups (p = 0.554). Conclusions Adoption of the CAD-RADS reporting template was associated with a reduction in downstream testing and cardiology referral rates among non-obstructive CAD (CAD-RADS 1 & 2) patients. Thus, CAD-RADS may impact downstream testing in patients in whom further testing can typically be deferred.Entities:
Keywords: cad-rads; ccta; coronary ct angiography; cost; downstream testing; subspecialty referral
Year: 2019 PMID: 31720176 PMCID: PMC6823058 DOI: 10.7759/cureus.5708
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cureus ISSN: 2168-8184
Figure 1Study subject flow chart
Cardiac computed tomography (CCT) scans for 2,000 total patients obtained before and after the adoption of CAD-RADS were screened. CCT scans performed for EP planning purposes, congenital heart disease, transcatheter aortic valve replacement planning, evaluation of new cardiomyopathy or heart failure, other thoracic vascular assessments, and preoperative scans were excluded. Additionally, scans in which the coronary CT angiogram was canceled due to very high coronary artery calcium (CAC) score were excluded. The remaining cohort was organized by maximum per-patient coronary stenosis or CAD-RADS as applicable.
CCT, cardiac computed tomography; EP, electrophysiology; HF, heart failure; CMP, cardiomyopathy; CAC, coronary artery calcium; CAD, coronary artery disease; CCTA, coronary computed tomography angiography; CAD-RADS, coronary artery disease reporting & data system
CAD-RADS reporting recommendations
LM, left main coronary artery; ACS, acute coronary syndrome; ICA, invasive coronary angiography; ECG, electrocardiogram; CAD, coronary artery disease; CAD-RADS, coronary artery disease-reporting & data system
| CAD-RADS ™ | 0 | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | N | |
| Maximal Stenosis | 0% (No plaque or stenosis) | 1% to 24% (Minimal stenosis or plaque with no stenosis) | 25-49% | 50-69% | A: 70% to 99% B: LM >50% or 3v obstructive disease | 100% | Non-diagnostic Study | |
| Acute Chest Pain | Conclusion | ACS Highly Unlikely | ACS Unlikely | ACS Possible | ACS Likely | ACS Very Likely | Cannot exclude ACS | |
| Recommended Intervention | None | None | None unless high clinical suspicion or high-risk plaque features, then consider hospital admission with Cardiology consultation | Consider hospital admission with Cardiology consultation and/or ICA | Consider hospital admission with Cardiology consultation. Further evaluation with ICA and revascularization as appropriate. | Consider expedited ICA on a timely basis and revascularization if appropriate if acute occlusion. | Additional or alternative evaluation for ACS is needed | |
| Management | No further evaluation of ACS is required. Consider other etiologies. | Consider the evaluation of non-ACS etiology, if normal troponin and no ECG changes. Consider referral for outpatient follow-up for preventive therapy and risk factor modification. | Consider the evaluation of non-ACS etiology, if normal troponin and no ECG changes. Consider referral for outpatient follow-up for preventive therapy and risk factor modification. | Recommendation for anti-ischemic and preventive management should be considered as well as risk factor modification. Other treatments should be considered if the presence of hemodynamically significant lesion. | Recommendation for anti-ischemic and preventive management should be considered as well as risk factor modification. | Recommendation for anti-ischemic and preventive management should be considered as well as risk factor modifications. | ||
| Stable Chest Pain | Conclusion | Absence of CAD | Minimal non-obstructive CAD | Mild non-obstructive CAD | Moderate stenosis | Severe stenosis | Total coronary occlusion | Cannot Exclude Obstructive CAD |
| Recommended Intervention | None | None | None | Consider functional assessment | A: Consider ICA or functional assessment B: ICA is recommended | Consider ICA and/or viability assessment | Additional or alternative evaluation may be needed | |
| Management | Reassurance. Consider non-atherosclerotic causes of chest pain. | Consider non-atherosclerotic causes of chest pain. Consider preventive therapy and risk factor modification. | Consider non-atherosclerotic causes of chest pain. Consider preventive therapy and risk factor modification, particularly for patients with non-obstructive plaque in multiple segments. | Consider symptom-guided anti-ischemic and preventive pharmacotherapy as well as risk factor modification per guideline-directed care. Other treatments should be considered per guideline-directed care. | Consider symptom-guided anti-ischemic and preventive pharmacotherapy as well as risk factor modification per guideline-directed care. Other treatments (including options of revascularization) should be considered per guideline-directed care. | Consider symptom-guided anti-ischemic and preventive pharmacotherapy as well as risk factors modification per guideline-directed care. Other treatments (including options of revascularization) should be considered per guideline-directed care. | ||
Baseline demographic data
NSR, non-standardized reporting; ATCP, atypical chest pain; CP, chest pain; ED, emergency department; CT, computed tomography; HTN, hypertension; CHD, coronary heart disease; CAD, coronary artery disease; CAC, coronary artery calcium; IQR, interquartile range; ASA, aspirin; CAD-RADS, coronary artery disease-reporting & data system
| CAD-RADS Cohort (n = 751) | NSR Cohort (n = 1045) | p-value | |
| Study Indications | |||
| ATCP | 612 (81.5%) | 823 (78.8%) | 0.159 |
| Dyspnea | 20 (2.7%) | 34 (3.3%) | 0.465 |
| Syncope | 22 (2.9%) | 25 (2.4%) | 0.656 |
| Abnormal Stress Test | 11 (1.5%) | 29 (2.8%) | 0.067 |
| Acute CP/ED CT | 32 (4.3%) | 28 (2.7%) | 0.064 |
| Asymptomatic | 54 (7.2%) | 106 (10.1%) | 0.033 |
| Age | 50±12 | 49±13 | 0.133 |
| Male gender | 446 (59.4%) | 577 (55.2%) | 0.082 |
| Active Smokers | 94 (12.5%) | 165 (15.8%) | 0.057 |
| Diabetes | 111 (14.8%) | 137 (13.1%) | 0.332 |
| HTN | 364 (48.5%) | 499 (47.8%) | 0.774 |
| Dyslipidemia | 333 (44.3%) | 468 (44.8%) | 0.885 |
| Known CHD | 53 (7.1%) | 77 (7.4%) | 0.854 |
| CCTA CAD burden | |||
| Normal | 360 (47.9%) | 595 (56.9%) | <0.001 |
| Non-obstructive CAD | 247 (32.9%) | 334 (32.0%) | 0.689 |
| Obstructive CAD | 29 (3.9%) | 51 (4.9%) | 0.313 |
| Non-diagnostic Scan/Segment | 73 (9.7%) | 44 (4.2%) | <0.001 |
| Any CAD | 276 (36.8%) | 385 (36.8%) | 1.000 |
| CAC score (median, IQR25,75) | 0 (0, 24.5) | 0 (0, 22) | 0.114 |
| CAC percentile | 76.7±18.3 | 78.2±18.0 | 0.288 |
| Incidence CAC > 75th percentile | 177 (26.0%) | 213 (22.4%) | 0.099 |
| Baseline Medical Therapies | |||
| Statin | 277 (36.9%) | 358 (34.3%) | 0.271 |
| Non-statin | 34 (4.5%) | 55 (5.3%) | 0.510 |
| ASA | 267 (35.6%) | 352 (33.7%) | 0.421 |
| Antihypertensive | 342 (45.5%) | 482 (46.2%) | 0.810 |
Figure 2Downstream testing rates before and after the adoption of the CAD-RADS standardized reporting template
Downstream testing in the CAD-RADS (blue) compared with NSR (green) cohorts. The dark color represents functional testing and the lighter color represents coronary anatomy testing. There were no differences in functional or anatomic testing rates between CAD-RADS and non-standardized reporting (NSR) cohorts within each stenosis severity category. Functional testing was far more common in all categories with the exception of obstructive CAD/CAD-RADS 3-5.
Panel A: Graphical representation of CAD-RADS and NSR cohorts overall and with non-obstructive/non-diagnostic scans; Panel B: Graphical representation of CAD-RADS and NSR cohorts with obstructive coronary artery disease
CAD-RADS, coronary artery disease-reporting & data system; NSR, non-standardized reporting; Non-obstr, non-obstructive; N, non-diagnostic
Figure 3Comparison of median downstream testing costs between the CAD-RADS and non-standardized reporting cohorts
Spline curve with error bars depicting the median downstream testing costs based on per-patient maximum coronary stenosis between the CAD-RADS and NSR cohorts. P = NS for all between-group comparisons. Downstream testing costs were higher for CAD-RADS N and NSR nondiagnostic scans compared to patients with no CAD/CAD-RADS 0 and obstructive CAD/CAD-RADS 3-5 (p < 0.05).
CAD-RADS, coronary artery disease-reporting & data system; Nonob CAD, non-obstructive coronary artery disease; Nondiag, non-diagnostic; Obstr CAD, obstructive coronary artery disease; NSR, non-standardized reporting; USD, United States Dollar