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People on Medicare who get elective surgery to open blocked heart
arteries often do not get the recommended stress tests to confirm the
surgery is warranted, U.S. researchers said on Tuesday.
The surgery, known as PCI or percutaneous coronary intervention,
involves threading a balloon-tipped catheter through the arteries and
opening up a clog. A tiny wire-mesh coil called a stent is often
inserted to prop open the artery.
PCI costs Medicare, the U.S. government's health insurance program
for people age 65 and older, $10,000 to $15,000 per procedure and has
contributed significantly to increases in Medicare spending since the
mid-1990s.
"It's important to document that patients are receiving PCI for
appropriate indications to ensure the optimal use of Medicare
resources," said Dr. Grace Lin of the University of California, San
Francisco, whose study appears in the Journal of the American Medical
Association.
More than 800,000 PCI procedures are performed each year and they
represent big business for medical device makers including Boston
Scientific Corp, Medtronic Inc, Abbott Laboratories Inc and Johnson
& Johnson.
A number of prior studies have suggested that many stable patients
with chest pain can get about the same level of relief with standard
drug therapy, but at far lower cost.
Lin and colleagues wanted to see if doctors who are performing PCI
surgeries were following widely accepted practice guidelines that call
for people to undergo a stress test to determine whether the procedure
is needed.
Stress tests, which are typically done on a treadmill, can show
whether a person has ischemia, or inadequate supply of blood to the
heart caused by a blocked artery.
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