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Long-term cost-effectiveness of severity-based triaging for large vessel occlusion stroke

Version 3 2024-06-19, 13:27
Version 2 2024-06-04, 04:01
Version 1 2022-10-05, 05:13
journal contribution
posted on 2024-06-19, 13:27 authored by Lan GaoLan Gao, Marj MoodieMarj Moodie, N Yassi, SM Davis, CF Bladin, K Smith, S Bernard, M Stephenson, L Churilov, BCV Campbell, H Zhao
Background and Purpose:Pre-hospital severity-based triaging using the Ambulance Clinical Triage For Acute Stroke Treatment (ACT-FAST) algorithm has been demonstrated to substantially reduce time to endovascular thrombectomy in Melbourne, Australia. We aimed to model the cost-effectiveness of an ACT-FAST bypass system from the healthcare system perspective.MethodsA simulation model was developed to estimate the long-term costs and health benefits associated with diagnostic accuracy of the ACT-FAST algorithm. Three-month post stroke functional outcome was projected to the lifetime horizon to estimate the long-term cost-effectiveness between two strategies (ACT-FAST vs. standard care pathways). For ACT-FAST screened true positives (i.e., screened positive and eligible for EVT), a 52 mins time saving was applied unanimously to the onset to arterial time for EVT, while 10 mins delay in thrombolysis was applied for false-positive (i.e., screened positive but was ineligible for EVT) thrombolysis-eligible infarction. Quality-adjusted life year (QALY) was employed as the outcome measure to calculate the incremental cost-effectiveness ratio (ICER) between the ACT-FAST algorithm and the current standard care pathway.ResultsOver the lifetime, ACT-FAST was associated with lower costs (–$45) and greater QALY gains (0.006) compared to the current standard care pathway, resulting in it being the dominant strategy (less costly but more health benefits). Implementing ACT-FAST triaging led to higher proportion of patients received EVT procedure (30 more additional EVT performed per 10,000 patients). The total Net Monetary Benefit from ACT-FAST care estimated at A$0.76 million based on its implementation for a single year.ConclusionsAn ACT-FAST severity-triaging strategy is associated with cost-saving and increased benefits when compared to standard care pathways. Implementing ACT-FAST triaging increased the proportion of patients who received EVT procedure due to more patients arriving at EVT-capable hospitals within the 6-h time window (when imaging selection is less rigorous).

History

Journal

Frontiers in Neurology

Volume

13

Article number

871999

Pagination

1-10

Location

Lausanne, Switzerland

ISSN

1664-2295

eISSN

1664-2295

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Publisher

Frontiers Research Foundation