Diagnostic performance and cost of CT angiography versus stress ECG – A randomized prospective study of suspected acute coronary syndrome chest pain in the emergency department (CT-COMPARE).

Link to article at PubMed

Diagnostic performance and cost of CT angiography versus stress ECG - A randomized prospective study of suspected acute coronary syndrome chest pain in the emergency department (CT-COMPARE).

Int J Cardiol. 2014 Oct 22;177(3):867-873

Authors: Hamilton-Craig C, Fifoot A, Hansen M, Pincus M, Chan J, Walters DL, Branch KR

Abstract
BACKGROUND: Coronary CT angiography (CCTA) has high sensitivity, with 3 recent randomized trials favorably comparing CCTA to standard-of-care. Comparison to exercise stress ECG (ExECG), the most available and least expensive standard-of-care worldwide, has not been systematically tested.
METHODS: CT-COMPARE was a randomized, single-center trial of low-intermediate risk chest pain subjects undergoing CCTA or ExECG after the first negative troponin. From March 2010 to April 2011, 562 patients randomized to either dual-source CCTA (n=322) or ExECG (n=240). Primary endpoints were diagnostic performance for ACS, and hospital cost at 30days. Secondary endpoints were time-to-discharge, admission rates, and downstream resource utilization.
RESULTS: ACS occurred in 24 (4%) patients. ExECG had 213 negative studies and 27 (26%) positive studies for ACS with sensitivity of 83% [95% CI: 36, 99.6%], specificity of 91% [CI: 86, 94%], and ROC AUC of 0.87 [CI: 0.70, 1]. CCTA (>50% stenosis considered positive) had 288 negative studies and 18/35 (51%) positive studies with a sensitivity of 100% [CI: 81.5, 100], specificity of 94% [CI: 91.2, 96.7%], and ROC of 0.97 [CI: 0.92, 1.0; p=0.2]. Despite CCTA having higher odds of downstream testing (OR 2.0), 30day per-patient cost was significantly lower for CCTA ($2193 vs $2704, p<0.001). Length of stay for CCTA was significantly reduced (13.5h [95% CI: 11.2-15.7], ExECG 19.7h [95% CI: 17.4-22.1], p<0.0005), which drove the reduction in cost. No patient had post-discharge cardiovascular events at 30days.
CONCLUSIONS: CCTA had improved diagnostic performance compared to ExECG, combined with 35% relative reduction in length-of-stay, and 20% reduction in hospital costs. These data lend further evidence that CCTA is useful as a first line assessment in emergency department chest pain.

PMID: 25466568 [PubMed - as supplied by publisher]

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