3.8 Article

Patient and physician preferences for non-invasive diagnostic cardiovascular imaging technologies: a discrete choice experiment

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SPRINGERNATURE
DOI: 10.1186/s41687-022-00419-0

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  1. Research Institute of the McGill University Health Center Studentship Competition Award
  2. McGill University Faculty of Medicine Max E. Binz Fellowship Award
  3. Family Medicine Academic and Excellence Research Award from the McGill University Department of Family Medicine
  4. Sawtooth software Inc.

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When choosing cardiovascular imaging tests, patients prioritize risks and side effects, while physicians focus on the out-of-pocket cost for patients. In shared decision-making with patients, physicians should discuss the risks and side effects associated with cardiovascular imaging tests. Both patients and physicians prefer a cardiovascular MR imaging test using a vasoactive breathing maneuver instead of alternatives that require contrast agents, pharmacological stress, or radiation.
Purpose: Diagnostic imaging techniques have to be selected for their accuracy, efficiency, cost-efficiency, and impact on outcome. But beyond that, the choice of non-invasive cardiovascular imaging tests for diagnosing coronary artery disease also has to respect patient safety and comfort. In this study, we investigated patient and physician preference in relation to the choice of cardiovascular imaging tests. Results: A total of 211 subjects (148 cardiac patients and 63 physicians) were enrolled and completed a discrete choice experiment. Tests and modalities were deconstructed into 6 attributes (risks and side effects, diagnostic accuracy, patient out-of-pocket cost, type of procedure, type of scanner and test duration). A Sawtooth software choice-based conjoint analysis with hierarchical Bayes estimation was performed and showed the risks and side effects attribute was assigned the most relative importance (30%) when considering patients' preference. Patients gave notably high value to tests with milder side effects, while preferring to avoid exposure to ionizing radiation and risks associated the use of pharmacological agents inducing direct coronary arteriolar vasodilation. Physicians allocated more importance to the patient out-of-pocket cost attribute (29%). Both patients and physicians valued tests' risks and side effects, diagnostic accuracy, patient out-of-pocket cost as the three most important attributes, but in diverging order. A market simulation comparing current cardiovascular imaging tests revealed breathing maneuver-enhanced cardiac magnetic resonance had the highest shares of preference in both patients (59.6%) and physicians (32.7%). Conclusion: A patients' preference for a particular cardiovascular imaging test was most determined by the risks and side effects, while physicians prioritized less costly tests for their patients. In shared decision-making with patients, physicians should therefore focus on a balanced discussion of risks and side effects associated with cardiovascular imaging tests. Both, patients and physicians would prefer a cardiovascular MR imaging test using a vasoactive breathing maneuver instead of currently used alternatives that require intravenous contrast agents, pharmacological stress, or radiation.

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