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Elective PCI: 12% of Cases Found Inappropriate

NEW ORLEANS – About 12% of the more than 140,000 Americans who underwent elective coronary artery stenting during 2009-2010 had an inappropriate procedure, based on an analysis of data from a national registry maintained by the American College of Cardiology.

In contrast, the rate of inappropriate procedures was 1% in the larger group of more than 355,000 patients who had an acute need for percutaneous coronary interventions (PCI) during the period studied, Dr. Paul S. Chan said at the annual meeting of the ACC.

The analysis also showed a striking hospital-to-hospital variation in the rate of elective PCI cases flagged as inappropriate. About 25% of the hospitals doing elective cases had a rate below 6%; another quarter had a rate of 17% or higher. Yet some hospitals had inappropriate rates that exceeded 30%.

Starting in May 2011, the ACC will start reporting data from this analysis to each of the more than 1,000 participating U.S. hospitals. By carefully reviewing cases that have been flagged as inappropriate, it is hoped that hospitals will learn from their mistakes and drive down the inappropriate rate, especially for elective PCIs, said Dr. Chan of Saint Luke’s Hospital in Kansas City, Mo.

The ACC collects the PCI data through the CathPCI portion of its National Cardiovascular Data Registry (NCDR). Dr. Chan and his associates rated each procedure they reviewed as appropriate, inappropriate, or uncertain based on comprehensive criteria established by an ACC expert panel (J. Am. Coll. Card. 2009;53:530-53).

"About 25% of the interventional cases in my practice would be categorized as inappropriate," commented Dr. Edward J. McNulty, an interventional cardiologist at Kaiser Permanente in San Francisco. "I get most of my patients from surgeons or other interventional cardiologists who feel the patients are too high risk. I do a lot of left main and multivessel PCI. There is no way that I can explain on the NCDR form why I consider these patients appropriate. The NCDR data don’t allow you to appreciate nuances. The criteria tend to penalize physicians who deviate from the average [by performing] complex cases."

Additionally, the way patients’ drug use gets recorded on the day of hospitalization is problematic, as patients may stop a chronically used drug on the day before entering the hospital and be erroneously recorded as not being on a therapy. Another issue is misclassification of symptoms, such as a patient who perceives ischemic chest pain as shortness of breath.

"I believe that inappropriate PCIs occur, and these results can certainly show signals. But within the ‘inappropriate’ procedures are some cases with mitigating circumstances," Dr. McNulty said in an interview.

The ACC expert panel published appropriateness criteria for 198 different clinical scenarios based on six separate clinical elements in February 2009. They applied the criteria to 500,154 U.S. cases treated with PCI during July 2009 through the end of September 2010. Inappropriate cases were defined as situations where expected negative consequences exceeded expected benefits.

PCI performed for an acute problem (such as high-risk unstable angina or MI) occurred in 71% of the cases. In this group, 99% of the cases were rated as appropriate, 1% as inappropriate, and fewer than 1% as uncertain. The remaining 29% of PCI procedures occurred in elective cases, of which 50% were rated as appropriate, 12% as inappropriate, and 38% as uncertain, Dr. Chan reported.

The three most common reasons for rating a case as inappropriate included patients with no ischemia, patients with mild ischemia, and asymptomatic patients, he said in an interview.

To address this issue, the ACC should develop a "real-time decision aid" to encourage interventionalists to "take a step back" during a catheterization to review a patient’s history and make a more informed decision on the need for PCI. The interventional cardiologist should review the degree of symptoms a patient has had and the evidence of ischemia, and take those findings into account when deciding whether the patient needs PCI.

Dr. Chan and Dr. McNulty said they had no disclosures.

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Body

The incidence of inappropriate PCIs will never reach zero. There will always be cases that the clinician knows are appropriate but that are impossible to define adequately using the NCDR data forms. There probably are cases in which patients are not properly worked up, but I’m not sure you can consistently evaluate cases adequately using the NCDR database.

We must be careful in what we say about institutions that seem to have "inappropriate" cases. Part of the problem may be the documentation. In my hospital, we found patients who initially seemed inappropriate, but when we looked harder we found that the problem lay in data recording. Rather than judging whether hospitals are doing a good or bad job, the focus should be on helping hospitals do better by helping them improve their patient selection and their case documentation. But hospitals also need to look at which patients are undergoing coronary procedures and defer the ones that are truly inappropriate.

The goal is to help hospitals do a better job. When you give hospitals and physicians performance data they inevitably improve. It happened with our program at Christiana. When I arrived 5 years ago, we first entered the NCDR, and in our first report back we looked terrible. But – no surprise – a lot of the problem turned out to be getting the documentation of cases right, and giving people an opportunity to think carefully about case selection. We use the information we get back from the NCDR to fix what is fixable in our decision making.

It’s possible that data like these from the NCDR will eventually be released to the general public, a step that the Society of Thoracic Surgeons (STS) has already taken for their registry of cardiothoracic surgery programs. The NCDR is under pressure from insurers, public interest groups, the media, and other stakeholders to make its registry data public. It is great that the STS has made its data publicly available. The ACC has followed a lot of what the STS has pioneered, and I think it’s inevitable that the NCDR data will be made public. I don’t like the one- to three-star rating system that the STS uses, but I’m not sure there is any really good way to present the information to the general public.

William S. Weintraub, M.D., is chief of cardiology at Christiana Care Health System in Newark, Del. He serves on the management board of the NCDR, and previously chaired the NCDR’s CathPCI registry. He said that he has received consulting fees or honoraria from Eli Lilly, Sanofi-Aventis, Shinogi, Cardionet, and Bristol-Myers Squibb. He has also received research grants from AstraZeneca, Abbott, BMS, Sanofi-Aventis, and Otsuka.

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Body

The incidence of inappropriate PCIs will never reach zero. There will always be cases that the clinician knows are appropriate but that are impossible to define adequately using the NCDR data forms. There probably are cases in which patients are not properly worked up, but I’m not sure you can consistently evaluate cases adequately using the NCDR database.

We must be careful in what we say about institutions that seem to have "inappropriate" cases. Part of the problem may be the documentation. In my hospital, we found patients who initially seemed inappropriate, but when we looked harder we found that the problem lay in data recording. Rather than judging whether hospitals are doing a good or bad job, the focus should be on helping hospitals do better by helping them improve their patient selection and their case documentation. But hospitals also need to look at which patients are undergoing coronary procedures and defer the ones that are truly inappropriate.

The goal is to help hospitals do a better job. When you give hospitals and physicians performance data they inevitably improve. It happened with our program at Christiana. When I arrived 5 years ago, we first entered the NCDR, and in our first report back we looked terrible. But – no surprise – a lot of the problem turned out to be getting the documentation of cases right, and giving people an opportunity to think carefully about case selection. We use the information we get back from the NCDR to fix what is fixable in our decision making.

It’s possible that data like these from the NCDR will eventually be released to the general public, a step that the Society of Thoracic Surgeons (STS) has already taken for their registry of cardiothoracic surgery programs. The NCDR is under pressure from insurers, public interest groups, the media, and other stakeholders to make its registry data public. It is great that the STS has made its data publicly available. The ACC has followed a lot of what the STS has pioneered, and I think it’s inevitable that the NCDR data will be made public. I don’t like the one- to three-star rating system that the STS uses, but I’m not sure there is any really good way to present the information to the general public.

William S. Weintraub, M.D., is chief of cardiology at Christiana Care Health System in Newark, Del. He serves on the management board of the NCDR, and previously chaired the NCDR’s CathPCI registry. He said that he has received consulting fees or honoraria from Eli Lilly, Sanofi-Aventis, Shinogi, Cardionet, and Bristol-Myers Squibb. He has also received research grants from AstraZeneca, Abbott, BMS, Sanofi-Aventis, and Otsuka.

Body

The incidence of inappropriate PCIs will never reach zero. There will always be cases that the clinician knows are appropriate but that are impossible to define adequately using the NCDR data forms. There probably are cases in which patients are not properly worked up, but I’m not sure you can consistently evaluate cases adequately using the NCDR database.

We must be careful in what we say about institutions that seem to have "inappropriate" cases. Part of the problem may be the documentation. In my hospital, we found patients who initially seemed inappropriate, but when we looked harder we found that the problem lay in data recording. Rather than judging whether hospitals are doing a good or bad job, the focus should be on helping hospitals do better by helping them improve their patient selection and their case documentation. But hospitals also need to look at which patients are undergoing coronary procedures and defer the ones that are truly inappropriate.

The goal is to help hospitals do a better job. When you give hospitals and physicians performance data they inevitably improve. It happened with our program at Christiana. When I arrived 5 years ago, we first entered the NCDR, and in our first report back we looked terrible. But – no surprise – a lot of the problem turned out to be getting the documentation of cases right, and giving people an opportunity to think carefully about case selection. We use the information we get back from the NCDR to fix what is fixable in our decision making.

It’s possible that data like these from the NCDR will eventually be released to the general public, a step that the Society of Thoracic Surgeons (STS) has already taken for their registry of cardiothoracic surgery programs. The NCDR is under pressure from insurers, public interest groups, the media, and other stakeholders to make its registry data public. It is great that the STS has made its data publicly available. The ACC has followed a lot of what the STS has pioneered, and I think it’s inevitable that the NCDR data will be made public. I don’t like the one- to three-star rating system that the STS uses, but I’m not sure there is any really good way to present the information to the general public.

William S. Weintraub, M.D., is chief of cardiology at Christiana Care Health System in Newark, Del. He serves on the management board of the NCDR, and previously chaired the NCDR’s CathPCI registry. He said that he has received consulting fees or honoraria from Eli Lilly, Sanofi-Aventis, Shinogi, Cardionet, and Bristol-Myers Squibb. He has also received research grants from AstraZeneca, Abbott, BMS, Sanofi-Aventis, and Otsuka.

NEW ORLEANS – About 12% of the more than 140,000 Americans who underwent elective coronary artery stenting during 2009-2010 had an inappropriate procedure, based on an analysis of data from a national registry maintained by the American College of Cardiology.

In contrast, the rate of inappropriate procedures was 1% in the larger group of more than 355,000 patients who had an acute need for percutaneous coronary interventions (PCI) during the period studied, Dr. Paul S. Chan said at the annual meeting of the ACC.

The analysis also showed a striking hospital-to-hospital variation in the rate of elective PCI cases flagged as inappropriate. About 25% of the hospitals doing elective cases had a rate below 6%; another quarter had a rate of 17% or higher. Yet some hospitals had inappropriate rates that exceeded 30%.

Starting in May 2011, the ACC will start reporting data from this analysis to each of the more than 1,000 participating U.S. hospitals. By carefully reviewing cases that have been flagged as inappropriate, it is hoped that hospitals will learn from their mistakes and drive down the inappropriate rate, especially for elective PCIs, said Dr. Chan of Saint Luke’s Hospital in Kansas City, Mo.

The ACC collects the PCI data through the CathPCI portion of its National Cardiovascular Data Registry (NCDR). Dr. Chan and his associates rated each procedure they reviewed as appropriate, inappropriate, or uncertain based on comprehensive criteria established by an ACC expert panel (J. Am. Coll. Card. 2009;53:530-53).

"About 25% of the interventional cases in my practice would be categorized as inappropriate," commented Dr. Edward J. McNulty, an interventional cardiologist at Kaiser Permanente in San Francisco. "I get most of my patients from surgeons or other interventional cardiologists who feel the patients are too high risk. I do a lot of left main and multivessel PCI. There is no way that I can explain on the NCDR form why I consider these patients appropriate. The NCDR data don’t allow you to appreciate nuances. The criteria tend to penalize physicians who deviate from the average [by performing] complex cases."

Additionally, the way patients’ drug use gets recorded on the day of hospitalization is problematic, as patients may stop a chronically used drug on the day before entering the hospital and be erroneously recorded as not being on a therapy. Another issue is misclassification of symptoms, such as a patient who perceives ischemic chest pain as shortness of breath.

"I believe that inappropriate PCIs occur, and these results can certainly show signals. But within the ‘inappropriate’ procedures are some cases with mitigating circumstances," Dr. McNulty said in an interview.

The ACC expert panel published appropriateness criteria for 198 different clinical scenarios based on six separate clinical elements in February 2009. They applied the criteria to 500,154 U.S. cases treated with PCI during July 2009 through the end of September 2010. Inappropriate cases were defined as situations where expected negative consequences exceeded expected benefits.

PCI performed for an acute problem (such as high-risk unstable angina or MI) occurred in 71% of the cases. In this group, 99% of the cases were rated as appropriate, 1% as inappropriate, and fewer than 1% as uncertain. The remaining 29% of PCI procedures occurred in elective cases, of which 50% were rated as appropriate, 12% as inappropriate, and 38% as uncertain, Dr. Chan reported.

The three most common reasons for rating a case as inappropriate included patients with no ischemia, patients with mild ischemia, and asymptomatic patients, he said in an interview.

To address this issue, the ACC should develop a "real-time decision aid" to encourage interventionalists to "take a step back" during a catheterization to review a patient’s history and make a more informed decision on the need for PCI. The interventional cardiologist should review the degree of symptoms a patient has had and the evidence of ischemia, and take those findings into account when deciding whether the patient needs PCI.

Dr. Chan and Dr. McNulty said they had no disclosures.

NEW ORLEANS – About 12% of the more than 140,000 Americans who underwent elective coronary artery stenting during 2009-2010 had an inappropriate procedure, based on an analysis of data from a national registry maintained by the American College of Cardiology.

In contrast, the rate of inappropriate procedures was 1% in the larger group of more than 355,000 patients who had an acute need for percutaneous coronary interventions (PCI) during the period studied, Dr. Paul S. Chan said at the annual meeting of the ACC.

The analysis also showed a striking hospital-to-hospital variation in the rate of elective PCI cases flagged as inappropriate. About 25% of the hospitals doing elective cases had a rate below 6%; another quarter had a rate of 17% or higher. Yet some hospitals had inappropriate rates that exceeded 30%.

Starting in May 2011, the ACC will start reporting data from this analysis to each of the more than 1,000 participating U.S. hospitals. By carefully reviewing cases that have been flagged as inappropriate, it is hoped that hospitals will learn from their mistakes and drive down the inappropriate rate, especially for elective PCIs, said Dr. Chan of Saint Luke’s Hospital in Kansas City, Mo.

The ACC collects the PCI data through the CathPCI portion of its National Cardiovascular Data Registry (NCDR). Dr. Chan and his associates rated each procedure they reviewed as appropriate, inappropriate, or uncertain based on comprehensive criteria established by an ACC expert panel (J. Am. Coll. Card. 2009;53:530-53).

"About 25% of the interventional cases in my practice would be categorized as inappropriate," commented Dr. Edward J. McNulty, an interventional cardiologist at Kaiser Permanente in San Francisco. "I get most of my patients from surgeons or other interventional cardiologists who feel the patients are too high risk. I do a lot of left main and multivessel PCI. There is no way that I can explain on the NCDR form why I consider these patients appropriate. The NCDR data don’t allow you to appreciate nuances. The criteria tend to penalize physicians who deviate from the average [by performing] complex cases."

Additionally, the way patients’ drug use gets recorded on the day of hospitalization is problematic, as patients may stop a chronically used drug on the day before entering the hospital and be erroneously recorded as not being on a therapy. Another issue is misclassification of symptoms, such as a patient who perceives ischemic chest pain as shortness of breath.

"I believe that inappropriate PCIs occur, and these results can certainly show signals. But within the ‘inappropriate’ procedures are some cases with mitigating circumstances," Dr. McNulty said in an interview.

The ACC expert panel published appropriateness criteria for 198 different clinical scenarios based on six separate clinical elements in February 2009. They applied the criteria to 500,154 U.S. cases treated with PCI during July 2009 through the end of September 2010. Inappropriate cases were defined as situations where expected negative consequences exceeded expected benefits.

PCI performed for an acute problem (such as high-risk unstable angina or MI) occurred in 71% of the cases. In this group, 99% of the cases were rated as appropriate, 1% as inappropriate, and fewer than 1% as uncertain. The remaining 29% of PCI procedures occurred in elective cases, of which 50% were rated as appropriate, 12% as inappropriate, and 38% as uncertain, Dr. Chan reported.

The three most common reasons for rating a case as inappropriate included patients with no ischemia, patients with mild ischemia, and asymptomatic patients, he said in an interview.

To address this issue, the ACC should develop a "real-time decision aid" to encourage interventionalists to "take a step back" during a catheterization to review a patient’s history and make a more informed decision on the need for PCI. The interventional cardiologist should review the degree of symptoms a patient has had and the evidence of ischemia, and take those findings into account when deciding whether the patient needs PCI.

Dr. Chan and Dr. McNulty said they had no disclosures.

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