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Radiology and Cost- Effectiveness and my experience at the Harvard School of Public Health

Radiology Cost Effectiveness - By Jeffrey Shyu

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Page 1: Radiology Cost Effectiveness - By Jeffrey Shyu

Radiology and Cost-Effectiveness

…and my experience at the Harvard School of Public Health

Page 2: Radiology Cost Effectiveness - By Jeffrey Shyu

HSPH

Page 3: Radiology Cost Effectiveness - By Jeffrey Shyu

HSPH – MPH Programs

• Clinical Effectiveness• Epidemiology• Global Health• Health and Social Behavior• Health Management• Health Policy• Occupational and Environmental Health• Quantitative Methods

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Quantitative Methods

• 42.5 credits (45 now)• Tuition $55,125 currently

– I got approximately 40-50% in grants/scholarships

• Completed over two semesters• Practicum requirement

• Busy! But very rewarding

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Coursework

• Epidemiology• Biostatistics• Rates and Proportions (Regression)• Economics• Decision Science• Meta-Analysis• Health Care Quality and Safety• Environmental Health• Ethics

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Clinical Effectiveness Summer Program

• 15 credits – Core requirements: epidemiology, biostatistics– Tuition $18,375 currently

• Intense 7 weeks

• Many go on to get full MPH

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Radiology and Cost-Effectiveness

OIG analysis of Part B data, 2007

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Radiology and Cost-Effectiveness

http://www.ifhp.com/

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Radiology and Cost-Effectiveness

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Radiology and Cost-Effectiveness

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NLST

• Methods– Three strategies: screening with CT,

screening with XR, no screening– QALY, ICER, cost per person estimates

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NLST

• Results (CT compared to no screening)• Per person:

– Additional $1631– Additional 0.0316 life-years– Additional 0.0201 QALYs– ICERs

• $52,000 per life-year gained• $81,000 per QALY gained

– Wide variability

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Lung Cancer Screening

• McMahon 2011– Up to $169,000/QALY

• Pyenson 2012– Less than $19,000 per life-year saved

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Case

• A new diagnostic technique may better characterize certain findings and prevent additional imaging workup

• However, assume the false negative rate for this technology is 5%– 5% of masses called benign but turn out to be

cancer– Cost-effective?– What if false negative rate is 1%

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Decision Analysis

• Identify and bound decision problem• Create decision tree• Fill in the tree

– Data collection, expert opinions• Calculate expected value• Sensitivity analysis

– Evaluate uncertainty and test conclusions

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Cost

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Cost Analysis• Direct Costs

– Decision leads to resource utilization directly– CT, staff costs, physician payments, additional workup for positive

results, lung cancer treatment• Medicare Physician Fee Schedule, Inpatient Prospective Payment System,

other payors etc.

• Indirect Costs– Changes in resource use leading to increased or decreased

productivity– Opportunity costs (time, etc.)

• BLS data

https://www.cms.gov/Medicare/Medicare-Fee-for-Service-Payment/PFSLookup/index.html?redirect=/pfslookup/02_PFSsearch.asphttp://www.bls.gov/news.release/archives/ecec_03102010.pdf

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Cost Analysis

• Perspectives– Patient– Payor– Societal

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Cost Analysis

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Effectiveness

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QALYs

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Expected Value• Weighted average of possible values of a random

variable

• Bet on a horse– Probability of winning: 10%– Potential net winnings: $1000– Costs $200 to play

• E(b) = $1000*0.1 - $200*0.9 = - $80

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Expected Value

• Expected value for two different treatment regimens

• Surgery + Medical Treatment• Medical treatment alone

• E(x) = 0.6*40 + 0.3*25 + 0.1*0 = 31.5 QALYs gained• E(y) = 0.7*40 + 0.15*20 + 0.15*0 = 31 QALYs gained

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Standard Gamble

http://www.ispor.org/news/articles/aug05/tbl1.gif

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Time Trade Off

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Measuring and Valuing Outcomes

• Perspectives– Patient– Society

• Health state classification systems– e.g. EQ-5D

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ICER

• Net increase in cost / Net gain in effectiveness

• Additional cost per unit increase in effect• Measure of value of resources• Willingness to pay threshold

https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/a/ae/ICER_Equation.png

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NLST

• Results (CT compared to no screening)• Per person:

– Additional $1631– Additional 0.0316 life-years– Additional 0.0201 QALYs– ICERs

• $52,000 per life-year gained• $81,000 per QALY gained

– Wide variability

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Willingness to Pay Threshold

• $25K per QALY gained?• $50K?• $100K?• $150K?

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Two Kinds of Decisions

• Ultrasound• XR• CT• MRI• PET/CT• PET/MRI• AMIGO• Super AMIGO

• 81 mg aspirin• 325 mg aspirin• 20 mg statin• 81 mg aspirin +

statin• 325 mg aspirin +

statin

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Shopping Spree

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Competing Choice

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Decision Analysis

• Identify and bound decision problem• Create decision tree• Fill in the tree• Calculate expected value• Sensitivity analysis

Page 34: Radiology Cost Effectiveness - By Jeffrey Shyu

Decision Analysis

• Identify and bound decision problem• Create decision tree• Fill in the tree• Calculate expected value• Sensitivity analysis

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Modeling

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Decision Tree

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Markov Model

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Markov Model

• Mutually exclusive, collectively exhaustive health states

• Transition probabilities– Govern movement among states

• Fixed cycle length• Health states with utility value and/or costs• Matrix algebra

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Decision Analysis

• Identify and bound decision problem• Create decision tree• Fill in the tree• Calculate expected value• Sensitivity analysis

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Case

• Data Search– Probabilities

• Percentage of CTs that find renal masses/cysts• True RCC rate• True benign finding (hyperdense cyst)• False negative rate• False positive rate• Etc…

– Data Quality/Missing Data– Expert Opinion

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Decision Analysis

• Identify and bound decision problem• Create decision tree• Fill in the tree• Calculate expected value• Sensitivity analysis

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Sensitivity Analysis

• How high a false negative rate can you tolerate for this test to be cost-effective?

• How many screening CTs can you perform for this test to be cost-effective?

• What complication rates can you tolerate for ablation to be more cost-effective than nephrectomy?

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Sensitivity Analysis

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Sensitivity Analysis

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Health Care Rationing?

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Health Care Rationing?• (c)(1) The Secretary shall not use evidence or findings from comparative

clinical effectiveness research conducted under section 1181 in determining coverage, reimbursement, or incentive programs under title XVIII in a manner that treats extending the life of an elderly, disabled, or terminally ill individual as of lower value than extending the life of an individual who is younger, nondisabled, or not terminally ill.

• (e) The Patient-Centered Outcomes Research Institute established under section 1181(b)(1) shall not develop or employ a dollars-per-quality adjusted life year (or similar measure that discounts the value of a life because of an individual’s disability) as a threshold to establish what type of health care is cost effective or recommended. The Secretary shall not utilize such an adjusted life year (or such a similar measure) as a threshold to determine coverage, reimbursement, or incentive programs under title XVIII.

http://www.ssa.gov/OP_Home/ssact/title11/1182.htm

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Challenges

• Variation and uncertainty• Data lacking• Cost estimates challenging• Lack of methodological uniformity• Politically controversial