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Comparison of costs of percutaneous transluminal coronary angioplasty and coronary bypass surgery for patients with angina pectoris

Authors :
Halem, C. van
Brink, F. van den
Feyter, P.J. (Pim) de
Serruys, P.W.J.C. (Patrick)
Suryapranata, H. (Harry)
Meeter, K.J.
Bos, E. (Egbert)
Dalen, F.J. (Frederik) van
Brand, M.J.B.M. (Marcel) van den
Halem, C. van
Brink, F. van den
Feyter, P.J. (Pim) de
Serruys, P.W.J.C. (Patrick)
Suryapranata, H. (Harry)
Meeter, K.J.
Bos, E. (Egbert)
Dalen, F.J. (Frederik) van
Brand, M.J.B.M. (Marcel) van den
Publication Year :
1990

Abstract

To determine the costs of a procedure, the total costs of the department that provides the service must be considered and, in addition, the direct cost of the specific procedure. Applying this principle to the cost accounting of angioplasty and bypass surgery results in a direct, i.e. procedural, cost, including the initial hospital stay, of respectively 8694 Dfl and 20,987 Dfl. A review of the follow-up data for the first year after the original intervention revealed a 2% reintervention rate for bypass surgery, while this percentage was 29% for angioplasty. Adding the first year costs involved with reinterventions to the procedural costs results in a 1-year cost of angioplasty and bypass operation of 13,625 Dfl and 21,363 Dfl, respectively. It is concluded that because of reinterventions in the first year, a mark up of 57% on the procedural cost of angioplasty must be added to cover 1-year costs, while for bypass surgery this is only 1%. Nevertheless, the 1-year cost for angioplasty is still 36% less than for bypass surgery. As reinterventions after PTCA may stay considerably higher than for CABG for several years, the mark-up perc

Details

Database :
OAIster
Notes :
application/pdf, European Heart Journal vol. 11, pp. 765-771, English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.ocn929966777
Document Type :
Electronic Resource