January 2nd, 2013

CABG Highly Cost-Effective in Diabetics with Multivessel Disease

In November the main results of the FREEDOM trial showed that diabetics with multivessel disease do better with CABG than PCI. Now the findings of the trial’s cost-effectiveness study, published online in Circulation, demonstrate that CABG is also highly cost-effective when compared with PCI.

Elizabeth Magnuson and colleagues  found that although CABG initially cost nearly $9000 more than PCI ($34,467 versus $25,845), over the long term CABG was more cost-effective. At 5 years, greater follow-up costs in the PCI group, in large part due to a greater number of  repeat revascularization procedures, reduced the difference so that CABG cost only $3600 more than PCI. The researchers calculated that CABG had a lifetime cost-effectiveness of $8132 per QALY (quality-adjusted life-year) gained, which is considered highly cost-effective. The finding was consistent across a broad range of assumptions.

The authors concluded “that CABG provides not only better long-term clinical outcomes than DES-PCI but that these benefits are achieved at an overall cost that represents an attractive use of societal health care resources. These findings suggest that existing guidelines that recommend CABG for diabetic patients with multivessel CAD remain appropriate in current practice and may provide additional support for strengthening those recommendations.”

“With great concerns about escalating healthcare costs, it’s very important when setting policy to understand the benefits gained from additional expenditures over the long run,” said Magnuson in an AHA press release. “This is especially true in cardiovascular disease where many interventions tend to be very costly up front.”

One Response to “CABG Highly Cost-Effective in Diabetics with Multivessel Disease”

  1. Mohammed Elkhalifa, mrcp says:

    I think it is clear now that cabg is really better than multi vessel pci, by all means, but still there is a question whether cabg is better than optimal medical therapy in 3 vessel disease in pts with chronic stable angina (without LM affection ) which I think it ‘ll be much more cost effective