Cost-Effectiveness of Intravascular Imaging-Guided Complex PCI: Prespecified Analysis of RENOVATE-COMPLEX-PCI Trial

  • David Hong
  • , Jin Lee
  • , Hankil Lee
  • , Juhee Cho
  • , Eliseo Guallar
  • , Ki Hong Choi
  • , Seung Hun Lee
  • , Doosup Shin
  • , Jong Young Lee
  • , Seung Jae Lee
  • , Sang Yeub Lee
  • , Sang Min Kim
  • , Kyeong Ho Yun
  • , Jae Young Cho
  • , Chan Joon Kim
  • , Hyo Suk Ahn
  • , Chang Wook Nam
  • , Hyuck Jun Yoon
  • , Yong Hwan Park
  • , Wang Soo Lee
  • Taek Kyu Park, Jeong Hoon Yang, Seung Hyuk Choi, Hyeon Cheol Gwon, Young Bin Song, Joo Yong Hahn, Danbee Kang, Joo Myung Lee

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

19 Scopus citations

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Although clinical benefits of intravascular imaging-guided percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI) in patients with complex coronary artery lesions have been observed in previous trials, the cost-effectiveness of this strategy is uncertain. METHODS: RENOVATE-COMPLEX-PCI (Randomized Controlled Trial of Intravascular Imaging Guidance vs Angiography-Guidance on Clinical Outcomes After Complex Percutaneous Coronary Intervention) was conducted in Korea between May 2018 and May 2021. This prespecified cost-effectiveness substudy was conducted using Markov model that simulated 3 states: (1) post-PCI, (2) spontaneous myocardial infarction, and (3) death. A simulated cohort was derived from the intention-to-treat population, and input parameters were extracted from either the trial data or previous publications. Cost-effectiveness was evaluated using time horizon of 3 years (within trial) and lifetime. The primary outcome was incremental cost-effectiveness ratio (ICER), an indicator of incremental cost on additional quality-adjusted life years (QALYs) gained, in intravascular imaging-guided PCI compared with angiography-guided PCI. The current analysis was performed using the Korean health care sector perspective with reporting the results in US dollar (1200 Korean Won, =1 dollar, $). Willingness to pay threshold was $35 000 per QALY gained. RESULTS: A total of 1639 patients were included in the trial. During 3-year follow-up, medical costs ($8661 versus $7236; incremental cost, $1426) and QALY (2.34 versus 2.31; incremental QALY, 0.025) were both higher in intravascular imaging-guided PCI than angiography-guided PCI, resulting incremental cost-effectiveness ratio of $57 040 per QALY gained within trial data. Conversely, lifetime simulation showed total cumulative medical cost was reversed between the 2 groups ($40 455 versus $49 519; incremental cost, -$9063) with consistently higher QALY (8.24 versus 7.89; incremental QALY, 0.910) in intravascular imaging-guided PCI than angiography-guided PCI, resulting in a dominant incremental cost-effectiveness ratio. Consistently, 70% of probabilistic iterations showed cost-effectiveness of intravascular imaging-guided PCI in probabilistic sensitivity analysis. CONCLUSIONS: The current cost-effectiveness analysis suggests that imaging-guided PCI is more cost-effective than angiography-guided PCI by reducing medical cost and increasing quality-of-life in complex coronary artery lesions in long-term follow-up. REGISTRATION: URL: https://www.clinicaltrials.gov; Unique identifier: NCT03381872.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)E010230
JournalCirculation: Cardiovascular Quality and Outcomes
Volume17
Issue number3
DOIs
StatePublished - 1 Mar 2024

Bibliographical note

Publisher Copyright:
© 2024 Lippincott Williams and Wilkins. All rights reserved.

Keywords

  • coronary artery disease
  • health care sector
  • myocardial infarction
  • percutaneous coronary intervention
  • quality of life

Fingerprint

Dive into the research topics of 'Cost-Effectiveness of Intravascular Imaging-Guided Complex PCI: Prespecified Analysis of RENOVATE-COMPLEX-PCI Trial'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.

Cite this