Total costs and atrial fibrillation ablation success or failure in medicare-aged patients in the United States
Autor: | Susan Boklage, Jay Lin, Michael H. Kim, Charles Kreilick |
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Rok vydání: | 2010 |
Předmět: |
Lung Diseases
Male medicine.medical_specialty medicine.drug_class medicine.medical_treatment Population Catheter ablation Comorbidity Medicare Pharmacotherapy Internal medicine Atrial Fibrillation Diabetes Mellitus medicine Humans Pharmacology (medical) Longitudinal Studies education Aged Demography Retrospective Studies Medicine(all) Insurance Claim Reporting education.field_of_study business.industry Anticoagulant Retrospective cohort study Atrial fibrillation General Medicine medicine.disease Ablation United States Surgery Treatment Outcome Catheter Ablation Costs and Cost Analysis Cardiology Female business Anti-Arrhythmia Agents Cohort study |
Zdroj: | Advances in Therapy. 27:600-612 |
ISSN: | 1865-8652 0741-238X |
Popis: | This retrospective cohort study compared the direct medical costs of successful versus unsuccessful catheter ablation in Medicare-aged patients with atrial fibrillation (AF), using medical claims data.AF patients withor = 12 months of continuous medical/pharmacy coverage pre- and postablation were identified from the MarketScan Medicare database (January 2003 to December 2006). For study inclusion, patients were required to haveor = 2 AF inpatient/outpatient visits within 6 months and to have received antiarrhythmic drug therapy within 12 months prior to the index ablation. Ablation success was defined as the absence of antiarrhythmic drug therapy 6-12 months postablation.Of 135 patients identified (67% men, mean age 73 years), ablation was successful in 69 (51.1%); most patients (96%) underwent a single procedure. Patients with successful ablation discontinued antiarrhythmic drug treatment after (mean) 54 days. Use of rate-control and anticoagulant drugs decreased after successful ablation, from 87% to 67% and from 86% to 64% of patients, respectively. Among failed ablation patients, 74% versus 70% received rate-control drugs, and 88% versus 82% received anticoagulants pre- versus postablation. Mean +/- SD per-patient procedural costs were $13,655+/-$12,761 for successful compared with $17,294+/-$26,502 (P=0.21) for failed ablation, while AF-related medical costs over 12 months postablation were $2394+/-$642 and $2703+/-$1706, respectively (P0.001). Overall costs tended to be lower for successful ($16,049+/-$12,536) than for failed ($19,997+/-$13,958) AF ablation (P=0.07). These findings are subject to the limitations imposed by a retrospective database analysis and a small sample size.Outside the clinical-trial setting, catheter ablation for second-line treatment of AF proved unsuccessful in half of Medicare-aged patients. Direct medical costs did not differ significantly between patients with failed and successful ablations. The high rate and costs of AF ablation failure in the Medicare-aged population reinforce the need for better understanding of prognostic factors for ablation outcome. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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