Does a novel diagnostic pathway reduce costs compared to current practice in cardiology outpatients with symptoms of chest pain?
A novel diagnostic pathway utilizing coronary calcium scoring for low-risk patients and direct angiography for others may significantly reduce healthcare costs compared to standard testing regimes.
OBJECTIVE: To evaluate the potential for change to costs from a decision to adopt a novel diagnostic pathway for referrals to cardiology outpatients with symptoms of chest pain. DESIGN: Costs modelling study using existing observational data, with a cost year of 2018. SETTING: Specialist Heart Centre in Singapore. PARTICIPANTS: All new referrals (n=10 622) to the outpatient clinics for investigation between January 2017 and December 2017. INTERVENTIONS: Two competing testing regimes are compared in a decision tree model. Current practice includes classification of patients by their risk and the use of treadmill tests, calcium scores, functional testing and CT angiogram. New practice offers a fundamental difference in use of diagnostics for patients, with some offered angiogram directly and for low-risk patients a calcium score is used to refine risk stratification. OUTCOME MEASURES: The expected cost difference between testing alternatives. RESULTS: The expected cost saving from 'New Practice' as compared with 'Current Practice' is S764 per patient. There is a 50% probability the savings per patient range between S764 and S824 and a 90% probability they are between S616 and S912. The expected savings to Singapore national health services are S26. 8 million annually, with a range of S16. 2 to S41. 1 million. CONCLUSIONS: We find some evidence that using a coronary calcium score, which can be performed with a fraction of the time and cost of a CT coronary angiogram, saves costs to health services.
Huang et al. (Tue,) studied this question.