Literature DB >> 9232166

MR and conventional angiography: work in progress toward assessing utility in radiology.

J S Swan1, D G Fryback, W F Lawrence, D A Katz, D M Heisey, M E Hagenauer, P M Selzer, B K Jacobson.   

Abstract

RATIONALE AND
OBJECTIVES: The authors assessed health-related quality of life changes associated with peripheral x-ray angiography and magnetic resonance (MR) angiography.
MATERIALS AND METHODS: Utility (the desirability or preference that individuals exhibit for a particular health state) was assessed in 30 patients with peripheral vascular disease referred for angiography by using a rating scale, additional categoric scaling questions to separate preference from experience, a willingness-to-pay technique, functional and cognitive status questions, and a time trade-off technique. All patients underwent both MR angiography and x-ray angiography.
RESULTS: Patients reported significantly (P < .05) less anxiety after the test, less pain after the test, fewer new physical limitations, and less effect on performance of daily activities with MR angiography. Findings from the overall rating scale and categoric scaling questions also significantly (P < .05) favored MR angiography. Patients were willing to pay a mean of 2.12% of annual income to avoid MR angiography and a mean of 7.41% to avoid x-ray angiography. The median quality-adjusted life gain required by patients to undergo the procedures was 52.5-60 days for x-ray angiography and 10.5 days for MR angiography, without discounting.
CONCLUSION: X-ray angiography has more profound short-term adverse effects on life than does MR angiography. Preference-based measures can be adapted to elicit patient values for short-term health states as seen in radiology.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Year:  1997        PMID: 9232166     DOI: 10.1016/s1076-6332(97)80231-0

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Acad Radiol        ISSN: 1076-6332            Impact factor:   3.173


  3 in total

1.  PC-Based 3D Reconstruction of MR Angiography in Evaluation of Intracranial Aneurysms. The Value of Pre-Treatment Planning for Embolization and Post-Treatment Follow-up.

Authors:  S W Park; M H Han; S H Cha; B J Kwon; K H Kim; O K Kwon; S K Baik; K H Chang
Journal:  Interv Neuroradiol       Date:  2004-10-20       Impact factor: 1.610

2.  Utility of CT angiography and MR angiography for the follow-up of experimental aneurysms treated with stents or Guglielmi detachable coils.

Authors:  A M Masaryk; R Frayne; O Unal; A H Rappe; C M Strother
Journal:  AJNR Am J Neuroradiol       Date:  2000-09       Impact factor: 3.825

Review 3.  The economic burden of incidentally detected findings.

Authors:  Alexander Ding; Jonathan D Eisenberg; Pari V Pandharipande
Journal:  Radiol Clin North Am       Date:  2011-03       Impact factor: 2.303

  3 in total

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