| Literature DB >> 31829227 |
Lara Nicole Goldstein1,2, Mike Wells3, Craig Vincent-Lambert3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Time-saving is constantly sought after in the Emergency Department (ED), and Point-of-Care (POC) testing has been shown to be an effective time-saving intervention. However, when direct costs are compared, these tests commonly appear to be cost-prohibitive. Economic viability may become apparent when the time-saving is translated into financial benefits from staffing, time- and cost-saving. The purpose of this study was to evaluate the cost-effectiveness of diagnostic investigations utilised prior to medical contact for ED patients with common medical complaints.Entities:
Keywords: Economic analysis; Emergency department; Point-of-care systems; Point-of-care testing
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31829227 PMCID: PMC6907262 DOI: 10.1186/s13049-019-0687-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Scand J Trauma Resusc Emerg Med ISSN: 1757-7241 Impact factor: 2.953
Fig. 1The POC intervention workflows compared to the normal ED patient workflow
Time frame definitions in the ED
| Administrative time | Treatment time |
|---|---|
| Time from patient arrival to doctor evaluation | Time from doctor evaluation to disposition decision |
| All patients go through the same process of opening a file and registering on the hospital system in our ED. | After a disposition decision is made, the patient may or may not timeously leave the ED. |
| The administrative process can be substantially longer on some days than on other days. This would change the wait-times for the patients prior to them presenting to the doctor and would confound the time measurements overall and therefore impact on the cost analysis. | Exit block may lead to a delay in the patient leaving the ED even if a timeous disposition decision is made. |
| Only treatment time was evaluated. | The disposition decision time was utilised. |
POC tests employed and cost comparisons between the control pathway tests and their POC equivalents
| The i-STAT System utilises single-use i-STAT test cartridges (i-STAT, Abbott Point of Care, Princeton, NJ, USA) with a handheld POC blood analyser. The CHEM8+ (sodium, potassium, chloride, total carbon dioxide, ionised calcium, glucose, urea, creatinine, haematocrit, haemoglobin and anion gap) and CG4+ (Lactate; pH; partial pressure carbon dioxide (PCO2); partial pressure of oxygen (PO2); total carbon dioxide; bicarbonate; base excess and oxygen saturation) were performed on venous blood specimens. | |||
| The CEL-DYN Emerald 22 benchtop haematology system was used. It is capable of providing a POC Complete/Full Blood Count as well as a white blood cell differential count. | |||
| Philips Pagewriter TC30 ECG machines were utilised to obtain the ECGs. All patients randomised to receive an ECG received a standard 12-lead ECG as well as a right-sided (V1R-V6R) and posterior (V7-V9) ECG. The cost of the ECG was the same in both the control and the intervention groups. | |||
| A Lodox Xmplar-dr was used by a radiographer to perform the LODOX® (LOw-DOse X-ray) radiographs (chest and abdomen, antero-posterior and lateral). The radiation exposure was approximately 339uGy per patient versus a standard chest and abdomen radiograph of approximately 5200uGy [ | |||
| Complete Blood Count | 4.57 | CBC (CEL-DYN Emerald 22) | 2.33 |
Urea, Creatinine, Electrolytes Blood Gas | 17.89 | i-STAT Chem8 CG4+ | 27.61 |
| X-ray | 121.58 | LODOX® | 104.17 |
| TOTAL | $ 144.04a | TOTAL | $ 134.11a |
$ Costs shown in US dollars for each individual test
CBC Complete Blood Count, ECG electrocardiogram, i-STAT i-STAT POC tests, LODOX® Low-dose x-ray
aThe direct comparison of net costs for testing between the groups if the costs of the tests alone are shown in isolation at face value i.e. what the cost would be for a patient who received all the standard diagnostic tests compared to a patient who received all the POC tests. It would cost $9.93 less to have all the POC tests. This does not include the costs of other tests that might be ordered (e.g. serum amylase or lipase tests)
Patient characteristics based on the twelve workflow allocations
| CONTROL | i-STAT | i-STAT CBC | ECG | LODOX | i-STAT ECG | i-STAT CBC ECG | i-STAT LODOX | i-STAT CBC LODOX | ECG LODOX | i-STAT ECG LODOX | i-STAT CBC ECG LODOX | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| N | 75 | 75 | 74 | 77 | 75 | 74 | 76 | 74 | 77 | 73 | 74 | 73 | |
| Age median (IQR) | 45.7 (34.2; 61.7) | 45.2 (31.6; 59.3) | 44.2 (33.3; 68.0) | 44 (33.9; 61.0) | 41.6 (33.0; 55.5) | 41.9 (33.3; 56.6) | 40.7 (27.3; 60.9) | 42.1 (29.9; 60.8) | 37.1 (30.0; 55.1) | 44.9 (35.0; 60.5) | 39.5 (30.0; 61.3) | 41.3 (31.5; 55.6) | 0.65 |
| Sex: Males (%) | 30 (40.0) | 30 (40.0) | 29 (39.2) | 36 (46.8) | 30 (40.0) | 27 (36.5) | 35 (46.1) | 18 (32.4) | 28 (36.4) | 31 (42.5) | 42 (56.8) | 37 (50.7) | 0.11 |
| Triage category | 0.30 | ||||||||||||
| N (%) | |||||||||||||
| Orangec | 22 (29.3) | 18 (24.0) | 11 (15.1) | 22 (28.6) | 15 20.0) | 16 (21.6) | 24 (31.6) | 18 (24.3) | 22 (28.6) | 14 (19.2) | 18 (24.3) | 21 (28.8) | |
| Yellowc | 52 (69.3) | 54 (72.0) | 59 (80.8) | 52 (67.5) | 60 (80.0) | 57 (77.0) | 50 (65.8) | 54 (73.0) | 55 (71.4) | 59 (80.8) | 56 (75.7) | 48 (65.8) | |
| Greenc | 1 (1.3) | 3 (4.0) | 3 (4.1) | 3 (3.9) | 0 (0.0) | 1 (1.4) | 2 (2.6) | 2 (2.7) | 0 (0.0) | 0 (0.0) | 0 (0.0) | 4 (5.5) | |
| Admitteda b N(%) | 32 (42.7) | 32 (42.7) | 40 (54.1) | 34 (44.2) | 34 (45.3) | 29 (39.2) | 42 (56.0) | 35 (47.3) | 32 (41.6) | 39 (53.4) | 40 (54.1) | 39 (53.4) | 0.62 |
| Dischargeda N(%) | 38 (50.7) | 41 (54.7) | 33 (44.6) | 43 (55.8) | 41 (54.7) | 42 (56.8) | 33 (44.0) | 39 (52.7) | 44 (57.1) | 33 (45.2) | 34 (45.9) | 34 (46.6) | |
CBC Complete Blood Count, ECG Electrocardiogram, IQR inter-quartile range, i-STAT i-STAT POC tests, LODOX® Low-dose x-ray
a8.2% of all patients were referred to another speciality as their disposition plan (i.e. neither admitted nor discharged)
bThe overall admission rate for this ED is usually 30–35%. This includes all patient presentations e.g. trauma, general surgery, orthopaedics, otorhinolaryngology etc. The medical subgroup of patients typically has a higher admission rate than other patients
cTarget times for the patients in each triage acuity category are Orange (to be seen within 10 min of ED arrival), Yellow (to be seen within 1 h of ED arrival) and Green (to be seen within 4 h of ED arrival)
Costs and time-saving analysis ranked according to net additional cost per patient
| Total Average Group Costa | Difference between costs of POC tests and control | Time Saved – Difference between control group time and POC group time | Staffing costs saved (US$ pp) | ICER - Incremental Cost Effectiveness Ratio | Net additional cost per patient in POC group | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| CONTROL | 81.86 | – | – | – | – | – |
| i-STAT + CBC | 82.86 | 1.00 | 31 | 23.21 | 0.03 | −22.21 |
| ECG ONLY | 75.96 | −5.90 | 9 | 6.74 | −0.65 | −12.63 |
| i-STAT + CBC + ECG | 90.73 | 8.87 | 26 | 19.47 | 0.34 | −10.60 |
| i-STAT | 92.59 | 10.73 | 21 | 15.72 | 0.51 | −4.99 |
| i-STAT + ECG | 95.36 | 13.50 | 21 | 15.72 | 0.64 | −2.22 |
| ECG + LODOX | 127.48 | 45.62 | 25 | 18.72 | 1.82 | 26.90 |
| i-STAT + ECG + LODOX | 143.11 | 61.25 | 32 | 23.96 | 1.91 | 37.29 |
| ALL POC TESTS | 144.10 | 62.24 | 31 | 23.21 | 2.01 | 39.03 |
| i-STAT + LODOX | 142.56 | 60.70 | 25 | 18.72 | 2.43 | 41.98 |
| i-STAT + CBC + LODOX | 146.74 | 64.88 | 27 | 20.22 | 2.40 | 44.67 |
| LODOX ONLY | 142.09 | 60.23 | 9 | 6.74 | 6.69 | 53.49 |
$ Costs shown in US dollars for each permutation
A negative number indicates a lower cost with the POC test permutation than traditional diagnostic testing
CBC Complete Blood Count, ECG electrocardiogram, ICER incremental cost effectiveness ratio, i-STAT i-STAT POC tests, LODOX® Low-dose x-ray, pp per patient
aThese are the average total actual costs that were incurred for the patients in each permutation. In the Control group, the only tests that were included were those selected by the doctors as they saw fit. In other groups, the average costs appear to be higher than would be expected as extra diagnostic tests may have been performed in those groups over and above those which were assigned (e.g. additional blood tests such as serum amylase or lipase). This principle extends across each of the groups
Fig. 2a Cost Effectiveness Plane. Permutations in the south-east quadrant were less costly and more effective (also referred to as dominant) [13]. Permutations in the north-east quadrant were still more effective but were also costlier. b Cost-Effectiveness Acceptability Curve. Cost-effectiveness acceptability curves for each of the permutations. The proportion of the bootstrap datapoints achieving cost-effectiveness at each increment of potentially acceptable cost is shown. Permutations which included LODOX® are shown with dashed lines. The dotted lines represent two potential willingness-to-pay thresholds. For example, at US$50, virtually all the non-LODOX® permutations have a high probability of being cost-effective. On the other hand, at a willingness-to-pay threshold of US$30, only the iSTAT and the ECG permutations have a high probability of being cost-effective. This graph allows the funder to weigh the relative cost of each of the permutations against their known effectiveness. CBC Complete Blood Count, ECG electrocardiogram, i-STAT i-STAT POC tests, LODOX® Low-dose x-ray