Access to cardiac PET/CT by sarcoidosis patients and cost-effectiveness analysis of cardiac PET/MR compared to the standard of care. Academic Article uri icon

Overview

abstract

  • IMPORTANCE: Cardiac sarcoidosis is associated with a high mortality rate. Given multiple barriers to obtaining cardiac PET imaging, we suspect individuals with access to this imaging modality are not representative of the Sarcoid patient population, which in the United States are predominantly Black females. OBJECTIVE: To evaluate the demographics of patients with cardiac PET access and the cost-effectiveness of cardiac PET/MR imaging relative to standard of care. DESIGN: This is a retrospective, observational study. The demographic information of patients with suspected cardiac sarcoidosis and cardiac PET/CT imaging within a national registry of sarcoidosis were reviewed (n = 4561). An individual-level, continuous, time-state transition model was used for the evaluation of long-term cost-effectiveness for the combined cardiac PET/MR compared to standard of care cardiac MR followed by cardiac PET/CT. RESULTS: Patients who underwent cardiac PET in the national registry had 88.35% higher odds of being male (p < 0.001) and 43.82% higher odds of being White (p = 0.003) than their counterparts who did not have cardiac PET imaging. Combined cardiac PET/MR had overall lower total lifetime costs ($8761 vs $10,777) and overall improved expected quality of life-years compared to the standard of care (0.77 vs 0.69). CONCLUSION AND RELEVANCE: The findings suggest that patients with access to cardiac PET/CT are not representative of the patient population most likely to have cardiac sarcoidosis in this limited study evaluation. Universal insurance coverage should be considered for Cardiac PET imaging as same day cardiac PET and MR imaging has potential long-term cost and quality of life benefit.

publication date

  • December 2, 2022

Research

keywords

  • Positron Emission Tomography Computed Tomography
  • Sarcoidosis

Identity

Digital Object Identifier (DOI)

  • 10.1016/j.clinimag.2022.11.021

PubMed ID

  • 36493682

Additional Document Info

volume

  • 94