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Journal Article

Citation

Jordan JE, Donaldson SS, Enzmann DR. Cancer 1995; 75(10): 2579-2586.

Affiliation

Department of Radiology, Stanford University School of Medicine, CA 94305-5105, USA.

Copyright

(Copyright © 1995, American Cancer Society, Publisher John Wiley and Sons)

DOI

unavailable

PMID

7736404

Abstract

BACKGROUND: This study was designed to investigate the costs associated with the use of magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) in the workup of spinal cord compression caused by metastatic disease, an area in which it has proven to be diagnostically useful. METHODS: The study was divided into two parts. Part 1 consisted of a retrospective review of the hospital charts of 46 patients, half of whom were diagnosed with cord compression in the pre-MRI era and the other half diagnosed after MRI availability; costs for these two groups were compared. Part 2 consisted of a review of several major studies comparing the sensitivities and specificities of MRI with alternative imaging techniques, usually myelography. Cost effectiveness and cost/cost ratios were derived for diagnostic usefulness using prevalence, sensitivity, specificity, and cost estimates of MRI and its alternatives, including costs of false-negative and false-positive testing. RESULTS: Our hospital-based experience yielded an average cost of $ 3664 per patient without MRI and $ 2283 per patient when MRI was available (1991 dollar amounts). The cost of diagnosis was 65% more expensive without MRI. Use of the literature-based experience demonstrated that the cost of diagnosis was at least 82% more costly without MRI than when it was available. However, when key variables were altered during sensitivity analysis, this difference of increased cost of diagnosis without MRI ranged from 25% to 98%. CONCLUSION: This work suggests that MRI may result in significant economic benefits in diagnosing metastatic cord compression, but further work is needed on physician behavior and referral patterns with MRI versus myelography as is long term follow-up for potential reductions in patient debility using MRI.


Language: en

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