Decision analysis in cardiac surgery: a scoping review and methodological primer

Author:

Vervoort Dominique12ORCID,Lee Grace S3,Lia Hillary3,Afzal Abdul Muqtader4,Tam Derrick Y12,Ouzounian Maral25,Takkenberg Johanna J M6ORCID,Wijeysundera Harindra C17ORCID,Fremes Stephen E1237

Affiliation:

1. Institute of Health Policy, Management and Evaluation, University of Toronto , Toronto, ON, Canada

2. Division of Cardiac Surgery, University of Toronto , Toronto, ON, Canada

3. Temerty Faculty of Medicine, University of Toronto , Toronto, ON, Canada

4. Schulich School of Medicine & Dentistry, University of Western Ontario , London, ON, Canada

5. Division of Cardiovascular Surgery, Peter Munk Cardiac Centre, Toronto General Hospital , Toronto, ON, Canada

6. Department of Cardiothoracic Surgery, Erasmus University Medical Center , Rotterdam, Netherlands

7. Schulich Heart Centre, Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre , Toronto, ON, Canada

Abstract

Abstract OBJECTIVES Randomized controlled trials are the gold standard for evidence generation in medicine but are limited by their real-world generalizability, resource needs, shorter follow-up durations and inability to be conducted for all clinical questions. Decision analysis (DA) models may simulate trials and observational studies by using existing data and evidence- and expert-informed assumptions and extend analyses over longer time horizons, different study populations and specific scenarios, helping to translate population outcomes to patient-specific clinical and economic outcomes. Here, we present a scoping review and methodological primer on DA for cardiac surgery research. METHODS A scoping review was performed using the PubMed/MEDLINE, EMBASE and Web of Science databases for cardiac surgery DA studies published until December 2021. Articles were summarized descriptively to quantify trends and ascertain methodological consistency. RESULTS A total of 184 articles were identified, among which Markov models (N = 92, 50.0%) were the most commonly used models. The most common outcomes were costs (N = 107, 58.2%), quality-adjusted life-years (N = 96, 52.2%) and incremental cost-effectiveness ratios (N = 89, 48.4%). Most (N = 165, 89.7%) articles applied sensitivity analyses, most frequently in the form of deterministic sensitivity analyses (N = 128, 69.6%). Reporting of guidelines to inform the model development and/or reporting was present in 22.3% of articles. CONCLUSION DA methods are increasing but remain limited and highly variable in cardiac surgery. A methodological primer is presented and may provide researchers with the foundation to start with or improve DA, as well as provide readers and reviewers with the fundamental concepts to review DA studies.

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

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