Affiliation:
1. Cardiovascular Division Washington University School of Medicine St. Louis MO
2. Barnes‐Jewish Hospital St. Louis MO
3. Center for Value and Innovation Washington University School of Medicine St. Louis MO
4. M&H Research, LLC San Antonio TX
Abstract
Background
Bleeding is a common, morbid, and costly complication of percutaneous coronary intervention. While bleeding avoidance strategies (
BAS
) are effective, they are used paradoxically less in patients at high risk of bleeding. Whether a patient‐centered approach to specifically increase the risk‐concordant use of
BAS
and, thus, reverse the risk‐treatment paradox is associated with reduced bleeding and costs is unknown.
Methods and Results
We implemented an intervention to reverse the bleeding risk‐treatment paradox at Barnes‐Jewish Hospital, St. Louis, MO, and examined: (1) the temporal trends in
BAS
use and (2) the association of risk‐concordant
BAS
use with bleeding and hospital costs of percutaneous coronary intervention. Among 3519 percutaneous coronary interventions, there was a significantly increasing trend (
P
=0.002) in risk‐concordant use of
BAS
. The bleeding incidence was 2% in the risk‐concordant group versus 9% in the risk‐discordant group (absolute risk difference, 7%; number needed to treat, 14). Risk‐concordant
BAS
use was associated with a 67% (95% confidence interval, 52–78%;
P
<0.001) reduction in the risk of bleeding and a $4738 (95% confidence interval, 3353–6122;
P
<0.001) reduction in per‐patient percutaneous coronary intervention hospitalization costs (21.6% cost‐savings).
Conclusions
In this study, patient‐centered care directly aimed to make treatment‐related decisions based on predicted risk of bleeding, led to more risk‐concordant use of
BAS
and reversal of the risk‐treatment paradox. This, in turn, was associated with a reduction in bleeding and hospitalization costs. Larger multicentered studies are needed to corroborate these results. As clinical medicine moves toward personalization, both patients and hospitals can benefit from a simple practice change that encourages objectivity and mitigates variability in care.
Publisher
Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)
Subject
Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine
Cited by
11 articles.
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