| Literature DB >> 33300381 |
Laura M Sawyer1, Klaus K Witte2, Matthew R Reynolds3, Suneet Mittal4, Frank W Grimsey Jones1, Sarah C Rosemas5, Paul D Ziegler5, Rachelle E Kaplon5, Shadi Yaghi6.
Abstract
Background: We assessed cost-effectiveness of insertable cardiac monitors (ICMs) in a US cryptogenic stroke population. Materials & methods: We modelled lifetime costs and quality-adjusted life years for three monitoring strategies post cryptogenic stroke: ICM starting immediately, ICM starting after Holter monitoring (delayed ICM) and standard of care involving intermittent ECG and Holter monitoring. Patient characteristics and detection efficacy were based on the CRYSTAL-AF trial. AF detection altered the modelled anticoagulation therapy and subsequent stroke and bleed risks. Results & conclusion: Immediate ICM was found to be cost-effective versus standard of care and cost-saving versus delayed ICM. Results were robust to sensitivity analyses. ICMs are a cost-effective diagnostic tool for the prevention of recurrent stroke in a US cryptogenic stroke population.Entities:
Keywords: United States; atrial fibrillation; cost–effectiveness evaluation; cryptogenic stroke; insertable cardiac monitors
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 33300381 DOI: 10.2217/cer-2020-0224
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Comp Eff Res ISSN: 2042-6305 Impact factor: 1.744