Percutaneous coronary intervention, or PCI is the clinical
name for angioplasty and cardiac stenting. The procedure is used to open
narrowed coronary arteries in patients suffering from chronic chest pain.
According to current guidelines by the
However, according to a study published in the Journal of the American Medical Association, less
than half of all Americans who undergo non-emergency artery-opening procedures
for heart disease get the recommended cardiac stress tests.
For the
study, researchers from the University of California-San Francisco, the Maine
Medical Center and the Dartmouth-Hitchcock Medical Center analyzed data from a random
sample of nearly 24,000 Medicare patients 65 years of age or older, who had
elective PCI at US hospitals during 2004. They found that only 44.5 percent of
those surveyed took a stress test on a treadmill within 90 days of their
elective surgery. The figures varied significantly depending on the hospital
patients were referred to (with rates ranging from a low of 22.1 percent to a
high of 70.6 percent), on patients characteristics and the age of doctors doing
the PCI.
PCI coast Medicare $10,000 to $15,000 per procedure and has
contributed significantly to increases in Medicare spending since the
mid-1990s. More than 1.2 million PCIs are performed annually in the
“We need to look at how we’re spending our money and can we
spend it more wisely with a better return on our investment in health care.
Right now, we have a system that pays the same for inappropriate and
appropriate care. There should be a restructuring of incentives,” Rita Redberg,
a professor of medicine at the
When it comes to reasons of why stress tests weren’t performed, the researchers could not find a clear answer. There were cases when doctors performed another test called coronary angiography, which uses special dye and X-rays to identify the artery blockages. In other cases, doctors provided PCIs because the patients had a family history of the disease and considered the procedure necessary. Another reason could be that current guidelines are not as clear as they should be.
“That situation may be clarified by
new guidelines expected to be released shortly by the