Variation in the use of cardiac procedures after acute myocardial infarction

E Guadagnoli, PJ Hauptman, JZ Ayanian… - … England Journal of …, 1995 - Mass Medical Soc
E Guadagnoli, PJ Hauptman, JZ Ayanian, CL Pashos, BJ McNeil, PD Cleary
New England Journal of Medicine, 1995Mass Medical Soc
Background There are large geographic differences in the frequency with which coronary
angiography and revascularization are performed. We attempted to assess whether
differences in case mix or in the treatment of specific groups of patients may explain this
variability. We also assessed the consequences of various patterns of treatment. Methods
We studied patients covered by Medicare who were 65 to 79 years of age and were
admitted to 478 hospitals with acute myocardial infarctions during 1990 in New York (1852 …
Background
There are large geographic differences in the frequency with which coronary angiography and revascularization are performed. We attempted to assess whether differences in case mix or in the treatment of specific groups of patients may explain this variability. We also assessed the consequences of various patterns of treatment.
Methods
We studied patients covered by Medicare who were 65 to 79 years of age and were admitted to 478 hospitals with acute myocardial infarctions during 1990 in New York (1852 patients), where the rate of use of cardiac procedures is low, and in Texas (1837 patients), where the rate of use of such procedures is high. We compared the patterns of treatment of clinically similar groups of patients in the two states. We also compared mortality rates and measures of the health-related quality of life.
Results
Coronary angiography was performed more often in Texas than in New York (45 percent vs. 30 percent, P<0.001). The frequency of use in Texas was significantly higher than that in New York for all the clinical subgroups of patients analyzed except those at greatest risk for reinfarction. Over a two-year period, the adjusted likelihood of death was lower in New York than in Texas (hazard ratio, 0.87; 95 percent confidence interval, 0.78 to 0.98). Patients from Texas were 41 percent more likely to report angina (P = 0.002) and 62 percent more likely to say they could not perform activities requiring energy expenditure of 5 or more metabolic equivalents than patients from New York approximately two years after infarction (P<0.001).
Conclusions
Physicians in Texas were more likely to perform angiography than physicians in New York for patients whose conditions allowed more discretion in the use of cardiac procedures. On average, there appears to be no advantage with respect to mortality or health-related quality of life to performing the procedures at the higher rate used in Texas.
The New England Journal Of Medicine
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