| Literature DB >> 33622962 |
Brad S Sutton1, Sarah L Bermingham2, Alexander Diamantopoulos2, Sarah C Rosemas3, Stelios I Tsintzos4, Ying Xia5, Matthew R Reynolds6.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Early use of insertable cardiac monitor (ICM) is recommended for patients with unexplained syncope following initial clinical workup, due to its superior ability to establish symptom-rhythm correlation compared with conventional testing (CONV). However, ICMs incur higher upfront costs, and the impact of additional diagnoses and resulting treatment on downstream costs and outcomes is unclear. We aimed to evaluate the cost-effectiveness of ICM compared with CONV for the diagnosis of arrhythmia in patients with unexplained syncope, from a US payer perspective.Entities:
Keywords: arrhythmias; electrocardiography; holter ecg; quality of care and outcomes; syncope
Year: 2021 PMID: 33622962 PMCID: PMC7907887 DOI: 10.1136/openhrt-2020-001263
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Open Heart ISSN: 2053-3624
Outpatient costs of conventional testing
| Diagnostic test | Reimbursement code | Unit payment* | Average number of tests during the year pre-ICM (baseline period) | Average number of tests per syncope event† |
| Emergency department visit | CPT 99284+APC 5024 | US$515 | N/A | 1 |
| Speciality physician consultation | CPT 99205 | US$229 | N/A | 2 |
| Holter monitor (24–48 hour) | CPT 93224 | US$101 | 0.26 | 0.11 |
| External loop recorder | CPT 93268 | US$227 | 0.15 | 0.07 |
| Mobile cardiovascular telemetry | CPT 93229 | US$805 | 0.17 | 0.07 |
| Extended Holter (up to 21 days) | CPT 0295T | US$145 | 0.01 | 0.00 |
| ECG | CPT 93000 | US$27 | 5.03 | 2.19 |
| CT (brain) | CPT 70460+APC 5571 | US$455 | 1.56 | 0.68 |
| CT (cardiac) | CPT 75574+APC 5571 | US$678 | 0.01 | 0.00 |
| MRI (brain) | CPT 70552+APC 5571 | US$628 | 0.55 | 0.24 |
| MRI (cardiac) | CPT 75559+APC 5523 | US$409 | 0.02 | 0.01 |
| Exercise test (cardiac stress test) | CPT 93015 | US$79 | 0.82 | 0.36 |
| Electroencephalogram | CPT 95812+APC 5722 | US$627 | 0.11 | 0.05 |
| Tilt test | CPT 93660+APC 5723 | US$659 | 0.16 | 0.07 |
| Electrophysiology study | CPT 93620+APC 0085 | US$6468 | 0.12 | 0.05 |
| Coronary angiogram | CPT 93454+APC 0080 | US$3979 | 0.20 | 0.09 |
| Carotid Doppler | CPT 93880+APC 5522 | US$425 | 0.72 | 0.31 |
| Basic laboratory testing | CPT 80053 | US$17 | 4.40 | 1.91 |
*Payments are based on national average payments, and represent a weighted average between Medicare and commercial paid amounts based on the proportion of patients with syncope covered by Medicare (66%).
†Calculated by dividing the average number of tests in the baseline year by the average number of syncope events (2.3) over the same period.
APC, ambulatory payment classification; CPT, current procedural terminology; CT, computed tomography; ECG, electrocardiogram; ICM, insertable cardiac monitor; MRI, magnetic resonance imaging.
Figure 1Schematic model structure. 1Circular nodes indicate alternative probability-based outcomes and ‘M’ nodes indicate entry to the Markov model. Circular arrows in the Markov model indicate residual probabilities (ie, one minus the sum of all other transition probabilities from that health state). ECG, electrocardiogram; ICM, insertable cardiac monitor.
Baseline probabilities and diagnostic accuracy of conventional testing versus ICM for unexplained syncope
| Parameter | Mean | Source |
| Monthly probability for general population | Age and sex-specific | US Centers for Disease Control |
| HR for cardiac vs no syncope | 2.01 | Soteriades |
| HR for vasovagal vs no syncope | 1.08 | Soteriades |
| Proportion of unexplained syncope patients with arrhythmia | 60.4% | Solbiati |
| Proportion of arrhythmia patients with bradycardia* | 68.7% | |
| Proportion of arrhythmia patients with ventricular tachycardia and ventricular fibrillation* | 10.2% | |
| Proportion of arrhythmia patients with supraventricular tachycardia or atrial fibrillation* | 21.1% | |
| Monthly probability of syncope recurrence | 5.1% | EaSyAS |
| Probability of major injury per syncope event | 4.8% | Bartoletti |
| Probability of minor injury per syncope event | 24.7% | Bartoletti |
| Conventional testing | 18.9% | Farwell |
| Reveal LINQ ICM | Month 0=70% | Musat |
| Reveal LINQ ICM | 3.0 years | |
| Risk of AE requiring ICM explant | First cycle=0.00734 | Pooled data from LINQ ICM usability and registry studies |
| Probability of removal on diagnosis of arrhythmic syncope | 80% | Assumption |
| Probability of removal on diagnosis of non-arrhythmic syncope | 100% | Assumption |
*See online supplemental files for a breakdown of how these probabilities were calculated.
AE, adverse event; EaSyAS, Eastbourne Syncope Assessment Study; ECG, electrocardiogram; HR, hazard ratio; ICM, insertable cardiac monitor; US, United States.
Unit costs
| Description | Reimbursement code | Medicare payment | Commercial payment | Blended payment* (2018 US$) |
| ICM device and insertion | Weighted average of: | US$9209 | US$11 511 | US$9975 |
| ICM explant | Total outpatient (APC 0020) plus physician fees (CPT 33284) | US$746.00 | US$932.50 | US$808.10 |
| Monthly ICM monitoring | Monthly average of one in-person check 1 month after insertion (CPT 93291) and remote checks every month thereafter (CPT 93298+CPT 93299) | US$72.18 | US$90.22 | US$78.18 |
| Conventional testing | Weighted average of 70% inpatient admission (DRG 312 with no ICD code for injuries: US$8296 blended payment*) and 30% outpatient testing: US$2536 blended ( | US$6063 | US$7579 | US$6568 |
| Cost of medication per month | See | NA | NA | US$640 |
| Pacemaker device and implantation | Total outpatient (APC 0655) plus physician fees (CPT 33208) | US$9958 | US$12 448 | US$10 852 |
| Ablation | Total outpatient (APC 8000) plus physician fees (CPT 93656) | US$19 693 | US$24 616 | US$21 332 |
| Defibrillator device and implantation | Total outpatient (APC 0108) plus physician fees (CPT 33249) | US$31 639 | US$39 549 | US$34 273 |
| Monthly pacemaker follow-up | CPT 93280+1 outpatient consultation every 6 months | US$72 | US$90 | US$78 |
| Monthly defibrillator follow-up | CPT 93289+2 in-person and three remote consultations in the first year, then one in-person and three remote consultations every year after | |||
| Monthly medication follow-up | CPT 93280+1 outpatient consultation every 6 months | US$72 | US$90 | US$78 |
| Major injury | Mean cost of hospitalisation for any injury-related DRG plus ICD code for syncope (ICD-10 R55 Syncope or ICD-10 I95.1 Orthostatic Hypotension). Top and bottom 1% of data were trimmed to remove outliers. The average cost across the >85th percentile were assumed to represent major injury based on the occurrence of major trauma in Bartoletti | US$31 742 | US$39 678 | US$34 385 |
| Minor injury | Mean cost of hospitalisation for any injury DRG plus ICD code for syncope (ICD-10 R55 Syncope or ICD-10 I95.1 Orthostatic Hypotension). Top and bottom 1% of data were trimmed to remove outliers. The average cost across the ≤85th percentile were assumed to represent minor injury based on the occurrence of minor trauma in Bartoletti et al 2008. | US$9409 | US$11 761 | US$10 192 |
*Payments are based on national average payments, and represent a weighted average between Medicare and commercial paid amounts based on the proportion of patients with syncope covered by Medicare (66%).
APC, ambulatory payment classification; CPT, current procedural terminology; DRG, diagnosis-related group; ICD-10, 10th Revision of the International Classification of Diseases; ICM, insertable cardiac monitor; USD, US dollar.
Mapped health state utilities
| Population | N | SF-36 mean dimension score | Mapped EQ-5D* | Mapped EQ-5D as a % of reference value | Source | |||||||
| PF | RP | BP | GH | SF | RE | MH | V | |||||
| van Dijk | ||||||||||||
| Male | 976 | 85 | 79 | 77 | 72 | 86 | 86 | 79 | 72 | 0.859 | N/A; baseline | |
| Female | 766 | 80 | 74 | 72 | 70 | 82 | 79 | 74 | 64 | 0.812 | N/A; baseline | |
| Male | 222 | 70 | 47 | 67 | 56 | 69 | 60 | 67 | 52 | 0.731 | 85% | |
| Female | 163 | 64 | 39 | 60 | 52 | 66 | 62 | 64 | 44 | 0.683 | 84% | |
| Barón-Esquivias | ||||||||||||
| With recurrence | 33 | 85 | 100 | 61 | 57 | 87 | 66 | 56 | 45 | 0.755 | 85% | |
| Without recurrence | 134 | 90 | 100 | 79 | 72 | 100 | 100 | 72 | 60 | 0.886 | Reference | |
| Baseline | 167 | 90 | 100 | 72 | 62 | 88 | 100 | 68 | 65 | 0.834 | NA; baseline | |
| Rodrigues | ||||||||||||
| Not suffered a fall | 1340 | 76 | 80 | 77 | 72 | 85 | 88 | 78 | 73 | 0.822 | N/A; baseline | |
| With limitations | 52 | 55 | 58 | 60 | 67 | 67 | 72 | 71 | 63 | 0.660 | 80% | |
| Without limitations | 39 | 72 | 78 | 70 | 74 | 80 | 88 | 72 | 67 | 0.769 | 94% | |
*Mapped using the algorithm described by Ara and Brazier 2008.24
BP, bodily pain; GH, general health; MH, mental health; NA, not applicable; PF, physical functioning; RE, role emotional; RP, role physical; SF, social functioning; V, vitality.
Base case results for CONV and ICM
| Comparator | Total costs | Total QALYs | Δ costs | Δ QALYs | ICER | NMB* |
| CONV | US$41 644 | 5.7307 | Baseline | Baseline | Baseline | US$531 424 |
| ICM | US$37 111 | 6.0313 | US$4532 | −0.3007 | Dominates | US$566 021 |
*Net monetary benefit (NMB) is a summary statistic that represents the value of an intervention in monetary terms given the willingness-to-pay per unit of benefit (for example, a QALY). NMB is calculated as: (benefit x willingness to pay threshold) - cost. A larger NMB value indicates greater cost-effectiveness of the intervention.
CONV, conventional testing; ICER, incremental cost-effectiveness ratio; ICM, insertable cardiac monitor; NMB, net monetary benefit; QALY, quality-adjusted life years; WTP, willingness-to-pay threshold.
Figure 2Probability of diagnosis over time. CONV, conventional testing.
Figure 3Breakdown of total costs for conventional testing and ICM. ICM, insertable cardiac monitor.
Figure 4Tornado diagram of one-way sensitivity analyses. The 12 most influential variables are shown here; please refer to online supplemental files for a tornado diagram with all one-way sensitivity analyses. ECG, electrocardiogram; ICM, insertable cardiac monitor; QALY, quality-adjusted life years; USD, US dollar.
Figure 5The cost-effectiveness of ICM compared with conventional testing over alternative time horizons. ICM, insertable cardiac monitor; QALY, quality-adjustedlife years; USD, US dollar.