Published: February 01, 2011
American College of Physicians Issues Advice for High-Value Health Care for Diagnostic Imaging for Low Back Pain
PHILADELPHIA - (BUSINESS WIRE) - The American College of Physicians (ACP) has found strong evidence that
routine imaging for low back pain with X-ray or advanced imaging methods
such as CT scan or MRI does not improve the health of patients.
In "Diagnostic Imaging for Low Back Pain: Advice for High-Value Health
Care from the American College of Physicians," published in the February
1 issue of Annals of Internal Medicine, ACP recommends that
routine or advanced imaging studies should only be performed in selected
higher-risk patients who have severe or progressive neurologic deficits,
are suspected of having a serious or specific underlying condition, or
are candidates for invasive interventions.
"Low back pain is one of the most common reasons for a patient to see a
physician and many patients with low back pain receive routine imaging
that is not beneficial and may even be harmful," said Amir Qaseem, MD,
PhD, MHA, FACP, director of clinical policy for ACP. "Unnecessary
imaging can lead to a series of unnecessary additional tests,
interventions, follow ups, and referrals that do not improve patient
outcomes."
ACP's Diagnostic Imaging for Low Back Pain: Advice for High-Value Health
Care also states:
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Decisions for repeat imaging should be based on the development of new
symptoms or changes in current symptoms.
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To be most effective, efforts to reduce routine imaging should take
into account clinician behaviors, patient expectations, and financial
incentives.
-
Patient education strategies should be utilized to inform patients
about current and effective standards of care and help them understand
the benefits and harms of the radiological testing.
ACP's recommendations are based on a systematic review conducted for the
Diagnosis and Treatment of Low Back Pain joint clinical practice
guideline from ACP and the American Pain Society, and a subsequent
meta-analysis.
Preserving High-Value, High-Quality Care
In a related paper, "High-Value, Cost-Conscious Health Care: Concepts
for Clinicians to Evaluate the Benefits, Harms, and Costs of Medical
Interventions," also published in the February 1 issue of Annals,
ACP explains the purpose of its Advice for High-Value Health Care
series: to slow the unsustainable rate of health care costs while
preserving high-value, high-quality care.
"Efforts to control expenditures should not focus solely on the costs,
but rather on the value of health-care interventions," said co-author
Paul Shekelle, MD, PhD, FACP, chair of ACP's Clinical Guidelines
Committee. "The best way to maintain effective and efficient care is to
identify and eliminate wasteful practices, and to demonstrate which
interventions provide high-value, which means their benefit is
sufficient to justify their harms and costs."
The distinction between cost and value (an assessment of whether an
intervention provides health benefits, does have acceptable level of
harms, and is worth what it costs) is critical, ACP says; high-cost
interventions may provide good value because the benefits may be large
and therefore justify the harms and costs. Conversely, low-cost
interventions may be of little or no value if they provide little
benefit.
In the paper, ACP outlines three key concepts necessary for
understanding how to assess the value of health-care interventions:
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It is essential to assess the benefits, harms, and costs of an
intervention to understand whether it provides good value. It is
important to reduce the use of interventions that provide no benefit.
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Assessment of the cost of an intervention should include not only the
cost of the intervention itself, but also any downstream costs that
occur because the intervention was performed.
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The incremental cost-effectiveness ratio estimates how much additional
cost is required to obtain additional health benefit, and provides a
key measure of the value of a health care intervention.
Health benefit can be measured in many ways, including cases detected or
averted, life years gained, or quality-adjusted life years gained. For
interventions that provide additional benefit at additional cost, ACP
recommends assessing their value to patients and society with
cost-effectiveness analysis.
Additional Resources:
About the American College of Physicians
The American
College of Physicians is the largest medical specialty organization
and the second-largest physician group in the United States. ACP members
include 130,000 internal medicine physicians (internists), related
subspecialists, and medical students. Internists specialize in the
prevention, detection, and treatment of illness in adults. Follow ACP on Twitter
and Facebook.
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American College of Physicians
Steve Majewski, 215-351-2514
SMajewski@acponline.org
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