Outcomes of clinical utility in amyloid-PET studies: state of art and future perspectives

Author:

Cotta Ramusino MatteoORCID,Perini Giulia,Altomare Daniele,Barbarino Paola,Weidner Wendy,Salvini Porro Gabriella,Barkhof Frederik,Rabinovici Gil D.,van der Flier Wiesje M.,Frisoni Giovanni B.,Garibotto Valentina,Teipel Stefan,Boccardi Marina

Abstract

Abstract Purpose To review how outcomes of clinical utility are operationalized in current amyloid-PET validation studies, to prepare for formal assessment of clinical utility of amyloid-PET-based diagnosis. Methods Systematic review of amyloid-PET research studies published up to April 2020 that included outcomes of clinical utility. We extracted and analyzed (a) outcome categories, (b) their definition, and (c) their methods of assessment. Results Thirty-two studies were eligible. (a) Outcome categories were clinician-centered (found in 25/32 studies, 78%), patient-/caregiver-centered (in 9/32 studies, 28%), and health economics-centered (5/32, 16%). (b) Definition: Outcomes were mainly defined by clinical researchers; only the ABIDE study expressly included stakeholders in group discussions. Clinician-centered outcomes mainly consisted of incremental diagnostic value (25/32, 78%) and change in patient management (17/32, 53%); patient-/caregiver-centered outcomes considered distress after amyloid-pet-based diagnosis disclosure (8/32, 25%), including quantified burden of procedure for patients’ outcomes (n = 8) (1/8, 12.5%), impact of disclosure of results (6/8, 75%), and psychological implications of biomarker-based diagnosis (75%); and health economics outcomes focused on costs to achieve a high-confidence etiological diagnosis (5/32, 16%) and impact on quality of life (1/32, 3%). (c) Assessment: all outcome categories were operationalized inconsistently across studies, employing 26 different tools without formal rationale for selection. Conclusion Current studies validating amyloid-PET already assessed outcomes for clinical utility, although non-clinician-based outcomes were inconsistent. A wider participation of stakeholders may help produce a more thorough and systematic definition and assessment of outcomes of clinical utility and help collect evidence informing decisions on reimbursement of amyloid-PET.

Funder

Swiss National Science Foundation

Innovative Medicines Initiative 2 Joint Undertaking

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Subject

Radiology Nuclear Medicine and imaging,General Medicine,Radiology Nuclear Medicine and imaging,General Medicine

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