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Circulation. 2002;105:823-829
Published online before print January 22, 2002, doi: 10.1161/hc0702.103973
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(Circulation. 2002;105:823.)
© 2002 American Heart Association, Inc.


Clinical Investigation and Reports

Value of Stress Myocardial Perfusion Single Photon Emission Computed Tomography in Patients With Normal Resting Electrocardiograms

An Evaluation of Incremental Prognostic Value and Cost-Effectiveness

Rory Hachamovitch, MD, MSc; Daniel S. Berman, MD; Hosen Kiat, MD; Ishac Cohen, PhD; John D. Friedman, MD; Leslee J. Shaw, PhD

From the Departments of Imaging (Division of Nuclear Medicine) and Medicine (Division of Cardiology), Cedars-Sinai Medical Center and the Department of Medicine, University of California Los Angeles School of Medicine, Los Angeles, Calif, and the Atlanta Cardiovascular Research Institute (R.H., L.J.S.), Atlanta, Ga.

Correspondence to Daniel S. Berman, MD, Cedars-Sinai Medical Center; Room A041, 8700 Beverly Blvd, Los Angles, CA 90048. E-mail daniel.berman{at}cshs.org

Background The incremental value and cost-effectiveness of stress single photon emission computed tomography (SPECT) is of unclear added value over clinical and exercise treadmill testing data in patients with normal resting ECGs, a patient subset known to be at relatively lower risk.

Methods and Results We identified 3058 consecutive patients who underwent exercise dual isotope SPECT, who on follow-up (mean, 1.6±0.5 years; 3.6% lost to follow-up) were found to have 70 hard events (2.3% hard-event rate). Survival analysis used a Cox proportional hazards model, and cost-effectiveness was determined by the cost per hard event identified by strategies with versus without the use of SPECT. In this cohort, a normal study was associated with an exceedingly low hard-event rate (0.4% per year) that increased significantly as a function of the SPECT result. After adjusting for pre-SPECT information, exercise stress SPECT yielded incremental value for the prediction of hard events ({chi}2 52 to 85, P<0.001) and significantly stratified patients. In patients with intermediate to high likelihood of coronary artery disease after exercise treadmill testing, a cost-effectiveness ratio of $25 134 per hard event identified and a cost of $5417 per reclassification of patient risk were found. Subset analyses revealed similar prognostic, and cost results were present in men, women, and patients with and without prior histories of coronary artery disease.

Conclusions Stress SPECT yields incremental prognostic value and enhanced risk stratification in patients with normal resting ECGs in a cost-effective manner. These findings are opposite those of previous studies examining anatomic end points in this same population and thus, if confirmed, have significant implications for patient management.


Key Words: radioisotopes • scintigraphy • exercise • cost-benefit analysis • follow-up studies




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