BMJ Open | 2019

Cost-minimisation analysis alongside a pilot study of early Tissue Doppler Evaluation of Diastolic Dysfunction in Emergency Department Non-ST Elevation Acute Coronary Syndromes (TEDDy-NSTEACS)

 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Abstract


Objective To estimate the cost implications of early angiography for patients with suspected non-ST elevation acute coronary syndrome (NSTEACS) using tissue Doppler imaging (TDI). Design A decision tree model was used to synthesise data from the pilot study and literature sources. Sensitivity analyses tested the impact of assumptions incorporated into the analysis. Setting Emergency department (ED), Brisbane, Australia. Participants Patients with suspected NSTEACS. Interventions TDI as a diagnostic tool for triaging patients within 4\u2009hours of presentation in addition to conventional risk stratification, compared with conventional risk stratification alone. Data sources Resource used for diagnosis and management were recorded prospectively and costed for 51 adults who had echocardiography within 24\u2009hours of admission. Costs for conventional care were based on observed data. Cost estimates for the TDI intervention assumed patients classified as high risk at TDI (E/e’>14) progressed early to angiography with an associated 1-day reduction in length of stay. Primary outcome measures Costs until discharge from the Australian healthcare perspective in 2016–2017 prices. Results Findings suggest that using TDI as a diagnostic tool for triaging patients with suspected NSTEACS is likely to be cost saving by $A1090 (95% credible interval: $A573 to $A1703) per patient compared with conventional care. The results are mainly driven by the assumed reduction in length of stay due to the inclusion of early TDI in clinical decision-making. Conclusions This pilot study indicates that compared with conventional risk stratification, triaging patients presenting with suspected NSTEACS with TDI within 4\u2009hours of ED presentation has potential cost savings. Findings assume a reduction in hospital stay is achieved for patients considered to be high risk at TDI. Larger, comparative studies with longer follow-up are needed to confirm the clinical effectiveness of TDI as a diagnostic strategy for NSTEACS, the assumed reduction in hospital stay and any cost saving.

Volume 9
Pages None
DOI 10.1136/bmjopen-2018-023920
Language English
Journal BMJ Open

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