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. 2016 Aug 18;11(8):e0161153. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0161153

Appropriate Use of Cardiac Stress Testing with Imaging: A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis

Joseph A Ladapo 1,*, Saul Blecker 2, Michael O'Donnell 3, Saahil A Jumkhawala 4, Pamela S Douglas 5
Editor: Heye Zhang6
PMCID: PMC4990235  PMID: 27536775

Abstract

Background

Appropriate use criteria (AUC) for cardiac stress tests address concerns about utilization growth and patient safety. We systematically reviewed studies of appropriateness, including within physician specialties; evaluated trends over time and in response to AUC updates; and characterized leading indications for inappropriate/rarely appropriate testing.

Methods

We searched PubMed (2005–2015) for English-language articles reporting stress echocardiography or myocardial perfusion imaging (MPI) appropriateness. Data were pooled using random-effects meta-analysis and meta-regression.

Results

Thirty-four publications of 41,578 patients were included, primarily from academic centers. Stress echocardiography appropriate testing rates were 53.0% (95% CI, 45.3%–60.7%) and 50.9% (42.6%–59.2%) and inappropriate/rarely appropriate rates were 19.1% (11.4%–26.8%) and 28.4% (23.9%–32.8%) using 2008 and 2011 AUC, respectively. Stress MPI appropriate testing rates were 71.1% (64.5%–77.7%) and 72.0% (67.6%–76.3%) and inappropriate/rarely appropriate rates were 10.7% (7.2%–14.2%) and 15.7% (12.4%–19.1%) using 2005 and 2009 AUC, respectively. There was no significant temporal trend toward rising rates of appropriateness for stress echocardiography or MPI. Unclassified stress echocardiograms fell by 79% (p = 0.04) with updated AUC. There were no differences between cardiac specialists and internists.

Conclusions

Rates of appropriate use tend to be lower for stress echocardiography compared to MPI, and updated AUC reduced unclassified stress echocardiograms. There is no conclusive evidence that AUC improved appropriate use over time. Further research is needed to determine if integration of appropriateness guidelines in academic and community settings is an effective approach to optimizing inappropriate/rarely appropriate use of stress testing and its associated costs and patient harms.

Introduction

Cardiac imaging has advanced physicians’ ability to diagnose and treat a variety of diseases, but rapid growth in the utilization and cost of imaging technology has spurred public and private insurers to scrutinize its use and construct policies aimed at reducing imaging expenditures.[13] Professional society organizations and clinical researchers have also taken steps to better characterize the value of cardiac imaging,[46] while also highlighting clinical scenarios under which imaging use is particularly low-value and unlikely to improve patients’ health or management. While the Choosing Wisely campaign is perhaps the most widely recognized of these professional efforts to self-regulate use of low-value tests and procedures, it was preceded and informed, in part, by the American College of Cardiology’s (ACC) development of appropriate use criteria (AUC) for cardiac imaging stress tests.[7] These AUC have expanded to inform the use of a variety of imaging studies and invasive procedures, but cardiac stress testing has been a focal point of attention, largely due to its wide dissemination,[2] radiation risks,[8] procedural risks, expense, and association with downstream testing and procedures—some of which are invasive.[9] However, until recently, little was known about the potential long-term impact of the ACC’s appropriate use criteria on clinical decision-making in patients evaluated for ischemic heart disease.[10]

We aimed to (1) systematically review studies of cardiac stress testing appropriateness, including appropriateness within physician specialties; (2) evaluate trends over time and in response to updates of AUC; and (3) characterize leading indications for inappropriate/rarely appropriate testing.

While a recent meta-analysis provided important insights into trends in appropriateness across several cardiac imaging modalities,[10] our study differs from this prior work in important ways: we include a greater number of published studies, report a wider range of information about patients characteristics in each study, provide information about indications for inappropriate/rarely appropriate testing, perform more robust analyses of appropriateness by physician specialty (we use both meta-regression and meta-analysis to compare cardiac specialists and internists), and apply a more rigorous method for evaluating temporal trends (we pooled more studies and adjusted for AUC version). Simply stated, we add a more methodologically rigorous meta-analysis to the literature on cardiac imaging appropriateness.

Methods

Search Strategy

We searched PubMed (which includes the MEDLINE database and other sources) from October 1, 2005 to March 1, 2015 for English-language articles reporting stress echocardiography and radionuclide myocardial perfusion imaging (MPI) appropriateness. Our search terms included the Medical Subject Headings exercise test, Cardiac Imaging Techniques, myocardial perfusion imaging, single photon emission computed tomography, and echocardiography; keywords identifying cardiac imaging stress tests, including stress test, thallium, sestamibi, Technetium, myocardial perfusion, MPI, SPECT, and echo; and keywords identifying appropriateness evaluations, including approp* (for “appropriate” and variants), and inapprop* (for “inappropriate” and variants). We identified additional publications through discussion between collaborators. Our report adheres to guidelines for systematic reviews recommended by the Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses (PRISMA) statement and Metaanalysis of Observational Studies in Epidemiology (MOOSE) group (see Supplemental materials).

Study Selection

Two investigators (J.L. and S.B.), working independently, in duplicate, identified studies eligible for further review after screening titles or abstracts. Studies then underwent full-text retrieval and data extraction if authors reported rates of appropriate or inappropriate cardiac stress testing based on published AUC. Studies were ineligible for inclusion if they focused on special populations (e.g., transplant candidates) whose clinical characteristics made them less representative of general populations undergoing cardiac stress testing, though we did include one study that enrolled only patients with acute chest pain.[11] When multiple studies reported appropriateness outcomes on identical or overlapping populations, only studies that reported unique outcomes were included (see Table 1 footnote for more details). When a cohort was evaluated with the original and updated AUC, both cohorts were included in the meta-analysis, but in separate strata. However, for meta-regression models, only the cohort enrolled in the year closest to the publication date of the AUC was included.

Table 1. Characteristics of Studies Included in the Meta-analysis.

Source Academic medical center* Enrollment year No. of patients Mean age, yr Men, % Diabetes, % Dyslipidemia, % Hypertension, % Smoking, % MI, % BMI>30, % Any revascularization, %** CAD, % Resting ECG normal, % Cardiac specialist, % Exercise stress, % Pharmocologic stress, %
Stress Echo 2008 AUC
 McCully et al, 2009 Yes 2005 298 66 52 20 66 60 54 11 NA 20 NA 41 NA NA NA
 Mansour et al, 2010 Yes 2008 289 59 51 NA NA NA NA NA NA NA NA NA 45 49 51
 Willens et al, 2013 Yes 2008 209 56 47 NA NA NA NA NA NA NA NA NA 52 NA NA
 Schmitz et al, 2013 Yes 2009–2010 300 NA NA NA NA NA NA NA NA NA NA NA NA NA NA
 Lin et al, 2013 No 2010–2011 111 51 46 11 52 44 33 NA NA NA 22 NA 100 NA NA
 Bhatia et al, 2013 Yes 2011 252 58 58 26 48 65 46 13 NA 8 NA NA 50 NA NA
Stress Echo 2011 AUC
 Cortigiani et al, 2012 No 2001–2007 1552 66 56 22 45 62 21 22 NA 18 35 NA NA NA 100
 Mansour et al, 2012 Yes 2008 289 NA NA NA NA NA NA NA NA NA NA NA NA NA NA
 Willens et al, 2013 Yes 2008 209 56 47 NA NA NA NA NA NA NA NA NA 52 NA NA
 Gertz et al, 2015 Yes 2010–2011 88 57 56 25 28 50 19 NA NA NA 16 NA NA NA NA
 Battacharyya et al, 2014 Yes 2010–2011 250 63 42 24 38 57 10 8 NA 8 NA NA NA 52 48
 Bhatia et al, 2013 Yes 2011 252 58 58 26 48 65 46 13 NA 8 NA NA 50 NA NA
 Willens et al, 2013 Yes 2011 209 56 47 NA NA NA NA NA NA NA NA NA 53 NA NA
 Willens et al, 2013 Yes 2011 111 58 50 NA NA NA NA NA NA NA NA NA 100 NA NA
Stress MPI 2005 AUC
 Gibbons et al, 2008 Yes 2005 284 67 63 27 78 71 48 20 41 34 NA 31 NA NA NA
 Soine et al, 2012 Yes 2005–2008 1445 61 91 31 60 77 39 0 NA 0 0 0 NA 41 59
 Soine et al, 2012 Yes 2005–2008 1377 58 48 21 42 51 18 0 NA 0 0 0 NA 63 37
 Mehta et al, 2008 Yes 2006 1209 61 45 NA NA NA NA NA NA NA NA NA NA NA NA
 Gibbons et al, 2010 Yes 2006 284 68 67 27 78 68 54 19 39 32 NA 32 NA NA NA
 Druz et al, 2011 Yes 2007–2008 585 64 55 NA NA NA NA NA NA NA 28 NA 43 57 43
 Hendel et al, 2010 No 2008–2009 6351 66 59 23 73 77 12 NA NA 36 40 NA 75 54 44
 Gibbons et al, 2011 Yes 2008 273 65 67 25 77 73 52 21 44 33 NA 34 NA NA NA
 Gupta et al, 2011 Yes 2008–2009 314 62 52 24 56 64 25 12 NA 8 33 NA 38 NA NA
 Oliveira et al, 2014 No 2008–2009 367 65 64 27 50 61 17 NA 20 NA NA NA NA NA NA
 Gholamrezanezhad et al, 2011 No 2009 291 55 43 22 60 50 15 11 NA 14 NA NA NA NA NA
Stress MPI 2009 AUC
 Carryer et al, 2010 Yes 2005 281 67 63 27 78 71 48 20 41 34 NA 31 NA NA NA
 Aldweib et al, 2013 Yes 2006 1199 64 57 28 73 82 58 21 45 NA NA NA NA 65 35
 Doukky et al, 2013 No 2007–2010 1511 59 57 22 46 56 12 2 NA 6 18 91 8 NA NA
 Oliveira et al, 2014 No 2008–2009 367 65 64 27 50 61 17 NA 20 NA NA NA NA NA NA
 Gholamrezanezhad et al, 2011 No 2009 291 55 43 22 60 50 15 11 NA 14 NA NA NA NA NA
 Nelson et al, 2012 Yes 2009 150 61 99 35 77 87 43 38 NA 21 NA NA NA NA NA
 Nelson et al, 2012 Yes 2009 150 65 57 21 62 74 23 29 NA 23 NA NA 47 NA NA
 Koh et al, 2011 Yes 2009 1623 61 59 31 75 71 14 NA NA NA NA NA 93 59 41
 Lalude et al, 2014 Yes 2009 420 56 44 NA NA NA NA NA NA NA NA NA NA NA NA
 Bohossian et al, 2015 Yes 2010–2011 133 NA NA NA NA NA NA NA NA NA NA NA NA 100 NA
 Saifi et al, 2013 No 2010–2011 11845 NA NA NA NA NA NA NA NA NA NA NA NA NA NA
 Lin et al, 2013 No 2010–2011 338 57 66 25 76 76 38 NA NA NA 49 NA 100 NA NA
 Gertz et al, 2015 Yes 2010–2011 369 62 55 31 62 83 29 NA NA NA 34 NA NA NA NA
 Moralidis et al, 2013 Yes 2010–2011 3032 66 59 31 66 80 19 NA NA 24 44 NA 92 29 71
 Johnson et al, 2014 No 2010 205 NA NA NA NA NA NA NA NA NA NA NA 100 NA NA
 Winchester et al, 2014 Yes 2010–2011 582 NA 96 41 76 82 26 41 NA 36 41 NA 38 NA NA
 Bohossian et al, 2015 Yes 2011–2013 212 NA NA NA NA NA NA NA NA NA NA NA NA 100 NA
 Singh et al, 2014 No 2011 328 67 56 33 65 80 14 NA NA NA NA NA 50 NA NA
 Johnson et al, 2014 No 2012 206 NA NA NA NA NA NA NA NA NA NA NA 100 NA NA
 Medolago et al, 2014 No 2013 2134 67 67 NA NA NA NA NA NA NA 49 NA 98 62 38
 Mahajan et al, 2015 Yes 2013–2014 403 62 48 31 67 71 27 NA 50 18 27 NA 32 NA NA

Abbreviations: AUC, Appropriate use criteria; Echo, echocardiography; MPI, myocardial perfusion imaging; NA, not available; PTCA, percutaneous transluminal coronary angioplasty; CABG, coronary artery bypass grafting

*Defined as studies whose patients were stress tested only at academic medical centers.

**Reflects prevalence of PTCA and may not include CABG for Bhatia et al, 2013; Cortigiani et al, 2012; Battacharyya et al, 2014; Hendel et al, 2010; Doukky et al, 2013; Nelson et al, 2012; and Moralidis et al, 2013.

For Mehta et al, 2008, authors did not report demographic data for patients who were unclassified by AUC.

Note about cohort overlap: There are several studies or cohorts that appear to have significant overlap but do not (though some overlap cannot be ruled out). For example, Gibbons et al, 2008, Gibbons et al, 2010, and Gibbons et al, 2011 (all under "Stress MPI 2005 AUC") enrolled cohorts in different years (note that the 2008 and 2010 studies have the same sample size but the enrollment years and demographic characteristics of the cohorts differ; they are therefore not identical cohorts). Similarly, Soine et al, 2012 ("Stress MPI 2005 AUC") enrolled two large cohorts over the same period of years but one cohort was enrolled from University of Washington Medical Center (n = 1377) and the second cohort was enrolled from the Veterans Health Administration of Puget Sound (n = 1445); the two cohorts are therefore not identical. Willens et al, 2013 ("Stress Echo 2008 AUC" and "Stress Echo 2011 AUC") used a complex study design and evaluated one cohort with both 2008 and 2011 Stress Echo AUC (n = 209, enrollment year = 2008) but analyses of these cohorts were not pooled so as to avoid double-counting. Willens et al, 2013 also enrolled two additional cohorts (n = 209 and n = 111; enrollment year = 2011 for both); though one of these cohorts has the same sample size as the cohort enrolled in 2008, it is not an identical cohort. Nelson et al, 2012 ("Stress MPI 2009 AUC") enrolled two cohorts of 150 patients in 2009 but one cohort was enrolled from the Miami VA Medical Center and the other was enrolled from the University of Miami Medical Group. Johnson et al, 2014 ("Stress MPI 2009 AUC") enrolled similarly sized cohorts but one cohort was enrolled in 2010 (n = 205) and the other was enrolled in 2012 (n = 206).

Data Extraction

Using a standardized protocol and reporting form, data were extracted on the following characteristics: (1) identifying information (first author, journal, country, institution, publication year); (2) AUC used (stress echocardiography 2008 or 2011 AUC, stress MPI 2005 or 2009 AUC); (3) patient characteristics (mean age, percentage of male patients, percentage of patients with a history of diabetes, hypertension, hyperlipidemia, body mass index>30, myocardial infarction (MI), percutaneous transluminal coronary angioplasty (PTCA), or coronary artery bypass grafting (CABG); (4) stress test characteristics (test used, type of stressor); (5) appropriateness patterns, including appropriateness stratified by physician specialty; and (6) indications for inappropriate/rarely appropriate testing. We recalculated appropriateness rates when authors excluded patients whose studies were unclassified, but did not include papers that did not report the number of patients who were unclassified. Disagreements between reviewers were resolved through discussion.

Statistical Analysis

The primary outcomes were the proportions of appropriate, inappropriate/rarely appropriate, uncertain/may be appropriate, and unclassified cardiac imaging stress tests. Patient characteristics were summarized after weighting by each study’s sample size. When studies reported that no patients were categorized as unclassified, a 0.5 correction factor was added to that outcome to facilitate calculation of a rate and standard error. Appropriateness estimates were pooled using the DerSimonian—Laird random-effects model to account for between-study heterogeneity attributable to differences in patient populations and clinician practice patterns. Statistical heterogeneity was also assessed with the Cochran Q statistic (a weighted sum of squared differences between studies with a χ2 distribution) and I2 statistic, which is derived from the Q statistic ([Q − df/Q] x 100) and estimates the proportion of overall variation attributable to between-study heterogeneity rather than chance. Because rates of uncertain/may be appropriate and unclassified patients tended to be low, we log transformed these values to more accurately estimate their standard errors and confidence intervals. To assess for publication bias, we constructed funnel plots (standard error versus appropriateness rates) stratified by AUC and performed the Egger test when at least 10 studies were present. None of these plots or statistical tests raised concerns for publication bias.

Meta-regression for temporal trends and effects of AUC updates

We performed meta-regression to assess temporal trends in appropriate and inappropriate/rarely appropriate cardiac stress testing. Meta-regression in this context is limited by the possibility of ecological bias (sometimes referred to as “aggregation bias” or “ecological confounding”),[12] since appropriateness rates in different cohorts over time may not reflect overall trends in appropriateness. We hypothesized that academic setting, prevalence of risk factors for ischemic heart disease (gender, age, comorbidities), and physician specialty would influence rates of appropriateness. However, because many studies reported only a few risk factors, we limited our patient covariates to gender and age, so as not to significantly reduce sample size for these regression models.[12] Separate models pooled all stress echocardiography or MPI studies, and we included an indicator for the specific AUC used. The key variable in these models was time, as captured by the midpoint of the enrollment period. To avoid double-counting, when the same stress echocardiography or MPI cohort was evaluated with original and updated AUC, we used the AUC whose publication date was closest to the enrollment dates.

We also used meta-regression to examine whether updated stress echocardiography and MPI AUC were associated with a reduction in unclassified patients, and to test whether cardiac specialists (cardiologists and cardiac surgeons) and internists had different rates of appropriate and inappropriate cardiac stress testing. Most studies reporting specialty appropriateness categorized physicians as cardiac specialists or non-cardiac specialists, but we considered the latter to be internists based on national referral patterns.[1] These regression models included indicators for the AUC version and presence of cardiac specialists (physician specialty model). We also explored performing a comparison of the pre-2005 period to the post-2005 period but were unable to do so because patient enrollment for all studies included in our meta-analysis began during or after 2005, with the exception of Cortigiani et al 2012. A 2-tailed P-value of <0.05 was considered statistically significant. Analyses were performed in Stata (version 14, StataCorp, College Station, Texas) with the metan family of functions.

Results

Literature Search

Our literature search yielded a total of 3,244 citations, of which 3,122 were excluded after initial screening of abstracts or titles (Fig 1). Of the remaining 122 citations, 34 met inclusion criteria and were selected for full-text review and data extraction. These articles included 6 articles and 6 cohorts for the stress echocardiography 2008 AUC,[11, 1317] 6 articles and 8 cohorts for the stress echocardiography 2011 AUC,[13, 1721] 10 articles and 11 cohorts for the stress MPI 2005 AUC,[2231] and 18 articles and 21 cohorts for the stress MPI 2009 AUC.[14, 20, 23, 30, 3245] Some studies contributed multiple cohorts to our meta-analysis. For example, for stress echocardiography 2011 AUC, Willens et al contributed three cohorts (three separate cohorts that underwent testing in August-September 2008, July-September 2011, and October-December 2011).[17] Similarly, for stress MPI 2005 AUC, Soine et al contributed two cohorts (one cohort underwent testing at University of Washington Medical Center and the second cohort underwent testing at the Veterans Health Administration of Puget Sound).[31] Each cohort is separately presented in the figures (note that enrollment dates are rounded to the nearest year).

Fig 1. Flow Diagram of the Literature Search and Study Selection.

Fig 1

The characteristics of these studies and their 41,578 participants are shown in Table 1. The mean age was 63.3 years, 40.4% were women, 12.7% had a prior history of myocardial infarction (reported in 16 studies), and 22.3% had a prior history of revascularization (reported in 18 studies). Overall, population characteristics were generally similar across studies.

Rates of appropriate and inappropriate testing

Appropriate cardiac stress testing rates were 53.0% (95% CI, 45.3% to 60.7%) and 50.9% (95% CI, 42.6% to 59.2%) with stress echocardiography 2008 and 2011 AUC, and 71.1% (95% CI, 64.5% to 77.7%) and 72.0% (95% CI, 67.6% to 76.3%) with stress MPI 2005 and 2009 AUC, respectively (Figs 2 and 3). Inappropriate/rarely appropriate cardiac stress testing rates were 19.1% (95% CI, 11.4% to 26.8%) and 28.4% (95% CI, 23.9% to 32.8%) with stress echocardiography 2008 and 2011 AUC, and 10.7% (95% CI, 7.2% to 14.2%), and 15.7% (95% CI, 12.4% to 19.1%) with stress MPI 2005 and 2009 AUC (Figs 4 and 5).

Fig 2. Appropriate Use Rates of Stress Echocardiography and MPI, Sorted by Patient Enrollment Year.

Fig 2

Fig 3. Inappropriate/Rarely Appropriate Use Rates of Stress Echocardiography and MPI, Sorted by Patient Enrollment Year.

Fig 3

Fig 4. Uncertain/May be Appropriate Use Rates of Stress Echocardiography and MPI, Sorted by Patient Enrollment Year.

Fig 4

Fig 5. Unclassified Use Rates of Stress Echocardiography and MPI, Sorted by Patient Enrollment Year.

Fig 5

Temporal trends in appropriate and inappropriate/rarely appropriate testing

We examined temporal trends and separately pooled all stress echocardiography or MPI studies, while controlling for AUC version, academic setting, population age, and population gender. For stress echocardiography and MPI, the average annual changes in appropriate testing were -1.9% (95% CI, -4.6% to 0.8%; adjusted change = +1.1%; 95% CI, -11.4% to 13.7%) and +1.9% (95% CI, -0.6% to 4.4%; adjusted change = +1.7%; 95% CI, -1.5% to 4.9%), and the average annual changes in inappropriate/rarely appropriate testing were +0.9% (95% CI, -1.7% to 3.5%; adjusted change = +2.8%; 95% CI, -8.5% to 14.1%) and -0.9% (95% CI, -2.8% to 1.1%; adjusted change = -0.2%; 95% CI, -2.8% to 2.4%), respectively.

In a sensitivity analysis, we attempted to analyze trends in appropriateness within the same institution, but these meta-regression models were not estimable due to limited sample size. However, we provide raw appropriateness rates from these studies: for stress echocardiography, one study from University of Miami Miller School of Medicine with three cohorts reported appropriate rates of 49.8% (2008 AUC, patient recruitment year 2009), 39.2% (2011 AUC, patient recruitment year 2012), and 43.2% (2011 AUC, patient recruitment year 2012). For stress MPI, three studies from Mayo Clinic reported appropriate rates of 64.1% (2005 AUC, patient recruitment year 2005), 66.0% (2005 AUC, patient recruitment year 2007), and 60.1% (2005 AUC, patient recruitment year 2008).[2426]

Uncertain/may be appropriate tests and changes in unclassified tests after AUC updates

Rates of uncertain/may be appropriate and unclassified stress tests for both modalities were generally low, but tended to be higher for stress echocardiography compared to stress MPI. The proportion of testing that was considered uncertain/may be appropriate was 5.7% (95% CI, 3.4% to 9.5%) and 13.9% (95% CI, 9.2% to 20.3%) with stress echocardiography 2008 and 2011 AUC, and 11.6% (95% CI, 9.6% to 14.1%) and 8.2% (95% CI, 6.5% to 10.5%) with stress MPI 2005 and 2009 AUC, respectively. The proportion of testing that was unclassified was 19.4 (95% CI, 11.4% to 33.0%) and 2.2% (95% CI, 0.9% to 5.6%) with stress echocardiography 2008 and 2011 AUC, and 5.4% (95% CI, 3.5% to 8.2%) and 0.7% (95% CI, 0.3% to 1.5%) with stress MPI 2005 and 2009 AUC, respectively.

A test for differences in unclassified rates demonstrated that the updated stress echocardiography AUC in 2011 was associated with a significant reduction in the proportion of these tests (relative reduction = 79%, p = 0.04). There was no evidence of a reduction in unclassified studies after the updated stress MPI criteria were released in 2009 (relative reduction = 64%, p = 0.25).

Appropriateness by physician specialty

Only 11 studies reported appropriateness rates by physician specialty,[14, 15, 17, 22, 27, 36, 39, 40, 4446] and 3 of these studies focused solely on cardiologists.[14, 17, 36] Pooled appropriateness rates from these specialty studies are reported in Fig 6. A test for heterogeneity demonstrated no significant difference in the proportion of appropriate stress echocardiograms or MPIs ordered by cardiac specialists compared to internists (stress echocardiogram difference = -7.3% [95% CI, -70.7% to 56.2%]; stress MPI difference = +7.5% [95% CI, -9.4% to 24.4%]; both with internists as the reference group), and no significant difference in the proportion of inappropriate/rarely appropriate stress echocardiograms or MPIs (stress echocardiogram difference = +12.5% [95% CI, -45.8% to 70.8%]; stress MPI difference = -10.5% [95% CI, -23.8% to 2.8%]).

Fig 6. Physician Specialty Appropriate and Inappropriate Use Rate.

Fig 6

Indications for inappropriate testing

Indications for inappropriate/rarely appropriate cardiac stress testing (Table 2) were reported by 7 stress echocardiography studies[1317, 19, 20] and 20 stress MPI studies.[14, 20, 22, 25, 26, 2830, 32, 3442, 44, 45] The three most frequent indications for inappropriate/rarely appropriate testing tended to be preoperative evaluation (range 0.0% to 90.0% for stress echocardiography, 0.0% to 75.0% for stress MPI); evaluation of symptomatic patients (often because they were low risk), had an interpretable electrocardiogram, and could exercise (range 10.5% to 44.4% for stress echocardiography, 5.1% to 57.0% for stress MPI); and evaluation of asymptomatic patients (range 4.0% to 65.0% for stress echocardiography, 0.0% to 60.0% for stress MPI).

Table 2. Indications for Inappropriate/Rarely Appropriate Cardiac Stress Test Use.

Source All (>95%) major inappropriate/rarely appropriate indications reported Preoperative evaluation, % Followup of prior testing, % Post revascularization, % Symptomatic patient, % Asymptomatic patient, % Other, %*
Stress Echo 2008 AUC
 McCully et al, 2009 Yes 18 2 16 11 54 0
 Mansour et al, 2010 Yes 40 NA NA 44 12 NA
 Lin et al, 2013 No NA NA 5 23 65 NA
Stress Echo 2011 AUC
 Cortigiani et al, 2012 Yes 4 7 32 33 21 3
 Willens et al, 2013 No 16 6 NA 44 8 NA
 Gertz et al, 2015 Yes 85 0 0 8 8 0
 Bhatia et al, 2013 No 90 NA NA NA NA NA
 Willens et al, 2013 No 8 17 NA 34 5 NA
 Willens et al, 2013 No NA 36 NA 44 6 NA
Stress MPI 2005 AUC
 Gibbons et al, 2008 Yes 15 12 12 12 49 0
 Mehta et al, 2008 No 28 NA NA 57 6 NA
 Gibbons et al, 2010 Yes 2 19 32 28 17 0
 Druz et al, 2011 Yes 7 0 0 43 50 0
 Hendel et al, 2010 No 4 4 24 16 45 NA
 Oliveira et al, 2014 Yes 23 0 39 31 8 0
Stress MPI 2009 AUC
 Carryer et al, 2010 No 10 28 10 NA 43 NA
 Aldweib et al, 2013 Yes 33 31 17 5 10 NA
 Doukky et al, 2013 No 3 NA NA 34 28 NA
 Oliveira et al, 2014 No 11 NA 21 16 NA 21
 Nelson et al, 2012 No 32 20 NA 16 16 NA
 Nelson et al, 2012 Yes 30 6 NA NA 60 NA
 Koh et al, 2011 Yes 59 3 2 21 11 NA
 Lalude et al, 2014 Yes 4 4 2 46 41 NA
 Lin et al, 2013 No NA NA 11 18 48 NA
 Gertz et al, 2015 Yes 77 0 2 9 11 0
 Moralidis et al, 2013 No 19 11 39 10 21 0
 Johnson et al, 2014 Yes 39 0 17 33 0 11
 Winchester et al, 2014 Yes 12 12 12 18 44 0
 Singh et al, 2014 No 44 NA NA NA NA NA
 Medolago et al, 2014 Yes NA 14 24 29 28 NA
 Mahajan et al, 2015 No 20 12 NA 52 NA NA

Abbreviations: AUC, Appropriate use criteria; Echo, echocardiography; MPI, myocardial perfusion imaging; NA, not available

*Imputed as 0 if sum of other categories exceeded 98%, a threshold selected to account for rounding errors in author reporting

Reflects authors' report unless imputed as 0 or not reported.

Discussion

By systematically reviewing studies of cardiac stress testing AUC, we found that rates of appropriate use tended to be lower for stress echocardiography compared to stress MPI, and that rates of inappropriate/rarely appropriate use tended to be higher. In the patient recruitment years of 2005 to 2014, we also found that rates of appropriate testing did not change significantly for stress echocardiography or MPI. Importantly, we showed that rates of unclassified stress echocardiograms fell after release of the 2011 AUC, whereas no significant changes were identified after updated stress MPI AUC were released. We did not find differences in appropriateness between physician specialties, though these analyses were substantially limited by sparse reporting. Finally, we found significant variability in indications for inappropriate/rarely appropriate cardiac stress tests, with preoperative testing and testing of low-risk symptomatic or asymptomatic patients representing leading indications.

Our study demonstrates that early efforts of the ACC’s Appropriateness Criteria Working Group have had durable and far-reaching consequences on the trajectory of academic inquiry into appropriate testing, with more than 41 diverse cohorts evaluated since publication of the original 2005 AUC. These evaluations have also extended into the community setting, though academic medical centers remain the dominant site for AUC evaluation. While the rapid growth in cardiac imaging that spurred initial efforts to develop AUC may be slowing—at least for stress MPI—the total number of cardiac stress test referrals in US ambulatory settings has not changed in recent years, and expenditures on inappropriate tests remain substantial.[1]

The main findings of our study are similar to those from a recently published meta-analysis[10] of cardiac imaging appropriateness, but there are important methodological differences: Fonseca et al analyzed 10 stress MPI 2009 articles with 11 cohorts whereas we analyzed 18 stress MPI 2009 with 21 cohorts; we present clinical characteristics from study cohorts that were not presented in Fonseca et al’s work, including the prevalence of diabetes, dyslipidemia, hypertension, smoking, coronary artery disease/myocardial infarction, and obesity; provide information about indications for inappropriate/rarely appropriate testing, which was absent in Fonseca et al; perform more robust analyses of appropriateness by physician specialty (we use both meta-regression and meta-analysis to compare cardiac specialists and internists); and apply a more rigorous method for evaluating temporal trends (we pooled more studies and adjusted for AUC version, whereas Fonseca et al estimated separate models [and therefore had smaller sample sizes] for each AUC version). In the context of AUC design, our study suggests that the potential effects of AUC are unclear, but these analyses are limited by the absence of a control group, and they are vulnerable to ecological bias.[12] We found no conclusive evidence of a trend over time in appropriate or inappropriate/rarely appropriate stress echocardiograms or MPIs. These results are in agreement with the work of Fonseca et al,[10] though our study samples differed (we captured more recently published studies), we used enrollment year instead of publication year as our measure of time, and we included an indicator in our meta-regression models for the AUC version used rather than separately treating studies that used different AUC. Our findings are also similar to the results of another recent meta-analysis that focused on stress MPI.[47] It is important to note, however, that there is substantial uncertainty about the extent to which findings within different cohorts in our meta-analysis reflect general trends.[12] Further, we did not account for geographic variation in appropriate and inappropriate use of cardiac imaging, which may be an important source of confounding.

Notably, a greater number of stress MPI publications reported the results of quality improvement initiatives, such as one study that reported the effects of FOCUS (Formation of Optimal Cardiovascular Utilization Strategies), a Web-based community and quality improvement tool.[43] We hypothesized that higher expenditures on stress MPI and expansion of administrative controls such as prior authorization requirements, in combination with widening public concerns about radiation exposure, may have engendered a climate of urgency in the context of stress MPI. It is also possible that these factors may have had the unintended consequence of causing a shift in ordering practices to stress echocardiography, in order to avoid stress MPI in questionable scenarios or other scenarios. Nonetheless, more concerted efforts to increase appropriate use of stress echocardiography and MPI and reduce inappropriate/rarely appropriate use are needed.

Our findings have important implications for insurers and policymakers. A substantial proportion of cardiac imaging stress tests remain inappropriate/rarely appropriate, and our pooled estimates—based largely on studies from academic medical centers—may underestimate the inappropriate/rarely appropriate use of this technology and overestimate its appropriate use in the community. Notably, some studies, such as Doukky et al, focused on patients undergoing testing in a community setting.[35] These inappropriate/rarely appropriate tests increase healthcare expenditures and are less likely to yield positive findings or improve patients’ health outcomes. It is important to recognize that a goal of zero inappropriate/rarely appropriate use is not only unrealistic but undesirable, as each patient represents unique considerations. While the optimal proportion is unknown, it is likely in the range of 10%, though no formal benchmarks have been proposed. Related to this, the small proportion of unclassified studies and relatively modest proportion of studies with uncertain appropriateness suggest that AUC may be an effective tool for evaluating the value of cardiac imaging stress tests, independent of prior authorization mechanisms and radiology benefits managers. Thus, wider incorporation and application of AUC, particularly in integrated health systems and accountable care organizations, could reduce the need for these alternate methods for constraining unnecessary utilization.

Introduction of the 2013 multimodality AUC adds calcium scoring and nonimaging exercise testing to the cohort of technologies subject to appropriate use review. We attempted to integrate the multimodality AUC into our meta-analysis but no studies rigorously implementing it were available at the time of our literature search. However, we did adopt the terminology of the multimodality AUC (e.g., “rarely appropriate” instead of “inappropriate”) to more closely align our results with current interpretation of appropriateness. Assessing its effects, particularly in cohorts that have previously been evaluated with earlier AUC versions, will provide important insights into the overall effect of multimodality criteria, with possible implications for insurers and policymakers. In the Prospective Multicenter Imaging Study for Evaluation of Chest Pain (PROMISE) trial,[6] all patients had chest pain, shortness of breath, or other symptoms as well as cardiovascular risk factors, and therefore would be considered appropriate candidates for cardiac imaging stress tests by these criteria. However, the routine performance of cardiac stress testing in patients without symptoms remains an important issue.[1]

Our study has several limitations. The majority of AUC evaluations were set in academic medical centers, where clinicians often care for higher-risk patients, may be more aware of AUC, and typically face weaker financial incentives to perform cardiac imaging stress tests. Because of small sample size and sparse reporting, we were unable to include a robust set of covariates in our examination of temporal trends. Moreover, meta-regression has significant limitations, including ecological bias (sometimes referred to as “aggregation bias” or “ecological confounding”),[12] and confounding from omitted variables (such as geographic variation in appropriate and inappropriate use of cardiac imaging, and clinical differences in the patient populations referred for stress echocardiography versus MPI), a risk shared by other analytic models of non-randomized, observational data. Further, the absence of a control group in our study attenuated our ability to causally link temporal changes in appropriateness to AUC development. Other ecological factors, including diffusion of radiology benefit managers and prior authorization programs, reductions in Medicare reimbursement, and the Choosing Wisely campaign, may also have contributed. In addition, application of AUC was not standardized across studies, so use of different methodologies could lead to different conclusions about appropriateness.

Recent AUC versions perform well for definitively categorizing the vast majority of stress echocardiograms and MPIs, but we found no conclusive evidence that diffusion of AUC increased the appropriate use of stress echocardiography or MPI. Overall rates of inappropriate/rarely appropriate testing are relatively low in academic settings, and integration of appropriateness guidelines in both academic and community settings may be an effective approach to further optimizing the inappropriate/rarely appropriate use of cardiac stress testing and its associated costs and patient harms.

Supporting Information

S1 Data. Data File for Meta-analysis.

(CSV)

S1 Text. PRISMA Checklist.

(DOCX)

S2 Text. MOOSE Checklist.

(DOC)

Acknowledgments

Dr. Joseph Ladapo had full access to all of the data in the study and takes responsibility for the integrity of the data and the accuracy of the data analysis. Dr. Ladapo's work is supported by a K23 Career Development Award (K23 HL116787) from the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute (NHLBI) and he serves as a consultant to CardioDx, Inc. Dr. Blecker’s work is supported by a K08 Career Development Award (K08 HS23683) from the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality.

Abbreviations

ACC

American College of Cardiology

AUC

Appropriate use criteria

MPI

myocardial perfusion imaging

CABG

coronary artery bypass grafting

MI

myocardial infarction

MOOSE

Metaanalysis of Observational Studies in Epidemiology

PRISMA

Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses

PROMISE

Prospective Multicenter Imaging Study for Evaluation of Chest Pain

PTCA

percutaneous transluminal coronary angioplasty

Data Availability

All relevant data are within the paper and its Supporting Information files.

Funding Statement

Dr. Joseph Ladapo had full access to all of the data in the study and takes responsibility for the integrity of the data and the accuracy of the data analysis. Dr. Ladapo's work is supported by a K23 Career Development Award (K23 HL116787) from the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute (NHLBI) and he serves as a consultant to CardioDx, Inc. Dr. Blecker’s work is supported by a K08 Career Development Award (K08 HS23683) from the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality.

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Associated Data

This section collects any data citations, data availability statements, or supplementary materials included in this article.

Supplementary Materials

S1 Data. Data File for Meta-analysis.

(CSV)

S1 Text. PRISMA Checklist.

(DOCX)

S2 Text. MOOSE Checklist.

(DOC)

Data Availability Statement

All relevant data are within the paper and its Supporting Information files.


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