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The Journal of Thoracic and Cardiovascular Surgery, Vol 91, 362-370, Copyright © 1986 by The American Association for Thoracic Surgery and The Western Thoracic Surgical Association
JM Wilson, EJ Dunn, CB Wright, WW Bailey, GM Callard, DB Melvin, DL Mitts, RJ Will and JB Flege Jr
From November, 1980, to May 1985, 699 patients have undergone percutaneous
transluminal coronary angioplasty of 784 lesions at our institutions.
Simultaneous surgical standby was available on all cases. One hundred
twenty-four patients (18%) underwent immediate myocardial
revascularization; 45 (6%) were operated on because the lesion could not be
dilated. Seventy-nine patients (11%) underwent immediate operation for an
acute complication of angioplasty: coronary occlusion in 45, dissection in
29, coronary perforation in three, and atrial perforation in one. Fourteen
patients (18%) required cardiopulmonary resuscitation en route to the
operating room, and 10 patients (20%) had insertion of an intra-aortic
balloon pump in the cardiac catheterization laboratory. The average time
from complication to reperfusion was 87 minutes, ranging from 40 to 165
minutes. An average of 2.0 grafts per patient (ranging from one to five
grafts per patient) were performed. Of those 79 patients who underwent
operation for an acute complication, one died (1.3%), 31 patients (39%) had
a myocardial infarction according to enzyme criteria (creatine
kinase-myocardial band greater than 40 IU), and 17 patients (22%) had new Q
waves on the electrocardiogram. Good results are related to minimizing the
time the myocardium is ischemic. No patient in whom reperfusion was begun
in less than 75 minutes had a Q wave infarction or a creatine kinase-
myocardial band level greater than 40 IU. Simultaneous surgical standby is
the only method allowing immediate access to surgical facilities. A standby
team of eight persons and equipment were immediately available for
emergency bypass grafting for an average of 3.6 hours (range 1.3 to 5.4
hours per angioplasty attempt). The patient charges for this simultaneous
standby were $632.00 per angioplasty attempt, or $442,278.00 for the entire
series. The actual cost of the standby was over $1,700.00 per attempt
totaling $1,188,843.00 for the 699 patients. This underestimation of the
cost of surgical standby has occurred in other series, because little
mention has been made of this cost in the published reports on the cost
effectiveness of angioplasty. In terms of time demands, over 2,500 hours
were spent by surgeons standing by for the 699 attempts. Simultaneous
surgical standby is the most effective means of limiting the time the
myocardium is ischemic after an angioplasty complication. However, this
method is costly, necessitating more of a financial and time commitment
than generally anticipated. Future studies of the cost effectiveness of
angioplasty should include the cost of surgical standby with accurate
per-patient cost accountability.
ARTICLES
The cost of simultaneous surgical standby for percutaneous transluminal coronary angioplasty
This article has been cited by other articles:
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J. B. Wong, F. A. Sonnenberg, D. N. Salem, and S. G. Pauker Myocardial Revascularization for Chronic Stable Angina: Analysis of the Role of Percutaneous Transluminal Coronary Angioplasty Based on Data Available in 1989 Ann Intern Med, December 1, 1990; 113(11): 852 - 871. [Abstract] [PDF] |
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