| Literature DB >> 34455484 |
Daniel Puhr-Westerheide1, Matthias F Froelich2, Olga Solyanik3, Eva Gresser3, Paul Reidler3, Matthias P Fabritius3, Matthias Klein4, Konstantin Dimitriadis4,5, Jens Ricke3, Clemens C Cyran3, Wolfgang G Kunz3, Philipp M Kazmierczak3.
Abstract
OBJECTIVES: To investigate the cost-effectiveness of supplemental short-protocol brain MRI after negative non-contrast CT for the detection of minor strokes in emergency patients with mild and unspecific neurological symptoms.Entities:
Keywords: Brain MRI; Cost-effectiveness analysis; Ischemic stroke; Quality-adjusted life years; Secondary prevention
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34455484 PMCID: PMC8794930 DOI: 10.1007/s00330-021-08222-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Eur Radiol ISSN: 0938-7994 Impact factor: 5.315
Fig. 1Representative CT-occult minor stroke in a patient presenting with transient left-sided mild hemiparesis. Non-contrast CT (a) did not show any signs of ischemic stroke. Diffusion-weighted imaging (b, b1000) and the corresponding apparent diffusion coefficient map (ADC map, c) from the short MRI protocol revealed an ischemic lesion in the posterior limb of the right internal capsule (arrow)
Fig. 2a Model overview. Comparison of standard strategy and employment of additional short-protocol MRI. True P, true positive; False N, false negative; True N, true negative. b Markov model. Long-term modeling of patient outcomes and long-term costs. Starting state defined by position in model
Input parameters
| Input parameter | Estimate | Distribution | Source |
|---|---|---|---|
| Average age | 61 years | – | 18 |
| Willingness to pay | $100,000 | – | 20–22 |
| Discount rate | 3.00% | – | 23 |
| Markov model time | Until death | – | - |
| Prevalence of minor stroke in collective | 10.17% | – | 18 |
| Diagnostic performances | |||
| No additional imaging sensitivity | 60.00% | β | Assumption |
| No additional imaging specificity | 100.00% | β | – |
| Additional ultrafast MRI sensitivity | 94.00% | β | 18 |
| Additional ultrafast MRI specificity | 100.00% | β | 18 |
| Acute diagnostic and treatment costs | |||
CT brain without contrast agent (Medicare code 76450) | $155 | 24 | |
Ultrafast MRI of brain (Medicare code 70551) | $309 | 24 | |
| Acute care of minor stroke patient | $3000 | 3,5 | |
| Acute care of major stroke patient | $6500 | 3,5 | |
| Long-Term treatment costs | |||
| Yearly costs of post-stroke care after mild stroke | $ 7023 | 25,26 | |
| Yearly costs of post-stroke care after major stroke | $ 19,062 | 25,26 | |
| Utilities | |||
| QOL of patients without major stroke assuming mRS of 0 | 1.00 | β | 28 |
| QOL of patients after major stroke assuming an average mRS of 4 | 0.33 | β | 28 |
| Death | 0.00 | β | - |
| Transition probabilities: risk of death | |||
| Risk of death without indication for secondary prophylaxis | US life tables | β | 29 |
| Additional risk of death with undetected minor stroke | 0.075 | β | 11,30 |
| Additional risk of death with detected minor stroke under secondary prophylaxis | 0.06 | β | 30 |
| Relative risk of death after major stroke assuming an average mRS of 4 | 1.71 | β | 29,31 |
| Transition probabilities: risk of stroke | |||
| Risk of new minor stroke | 0.003 | β | 9,32,33 |
| Yearly detection rate of minor stroke | 0.1 | β | Assumption |
| Risk of major stroke in patients without minor stroke | 0.006 | β | 32,33 |
| Risk of major stroke with undetected minor stroke (first year) assuming 80% risk reduction with secondary preventive treatment | 0.255 | β | 11,30,34 |
| Risk of major stroke with undetected minor stroke (after first year) assuming 80% risk reduction with secondary preventive treatment | 0.055 | β | 11,30,34 |
| Risk of major stroke with detected minor stroke (first year) | 0.051 | β | 30 |
| Risk of major stroke with detected minor stroke (after first year) | 0.011 | β | 34 |
Base case analysis results
| Strategy | Cumulative costs | Cumulative effectiveness | Interpretation |
|---|---|---|---|
| CT only | $27,109 | 14.25 QALYs | Dominated strategy |
| Additional short-protocol MRI | $26,304 | 14.31 QALYs | Dominant strategy |
| Delta | − $805 | 0.06 QALYs |
Fig. 3a Deterministic sensitivity analysis. In all ranges investigated, additional short-protocol MRI remained the dominant strategy. b Incremental cost-effectiveness ratio (ICER). ICER are presented depending on clinical detection rates of minor strokes in patients not undergoing short-protocol MRI. MRI remains the cost-effective strategy in all investigated ranges
Fig. 4Probabilistic sensitivity analysis for both strategies. Additional short-protocol MRI in blue, no additional imaging in red