Neuroimaging overuse is more common in Medicare compared with the VA
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Abstract
Objective: To inform initiatives to reduce overuse, we compared neuroimaging appropriateness in a large Medicare cohort with a Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) cohort.
Methods: Separate retrospective cohorts were established in Medicare and in VA for headache and neuropathy from 2004 to 2011. The Medicare cohorts included all patients enrolled in the Health and Retirement Study (HRS) with linked Medicare claims (HRS-Medicare; n = 1,244 for headache and 998 for neuropathy). The VA cohorts included all patients receiving services in the VA (n = 93,755 for headache and 183,642 for neuropathy). Inclusion criteria were age over 65 years and an outpatient visit for incident neuropathy or a primary headache. Neuroimaging use was measured with Current Procedural Terminology codes and potential overuse was defined using published criteria for use with administrative data. Increasingly specific appropriateness criteria excluded nontarget conditions for which neuroimaging may be appropriate.
Results: For both peripheral neuropathy and headache, potentially inappropriate imaging was more common in HRS-Medicare compared with the VA. Forty-nine percentage of all headache patients received neuroimaging in HRS-Medicare compared with 22.1% in the VA (p < 0.001) and differences persist when analyzing more specific definitions of overuse. A total of 23.7% of all HRS-Medicare incident neuropathy patients received neuroimaging compared with 9.0% in the VA (p < 0.001), and the difference persisted after excluding nontarget conditions.
Conclusions: Overuse of neuroimaging is likely less common in the VA than in a Medicare population. Better understanding the reasons for the more selective use of neuroimaging in the VA could help inform future initiatives to reduce overuse of diagnostic testing.
GLOSSARY
- HRS=
- Health and Retirement Study;
- ICD-9=
- International Classification of Diseases–9;
- NCS=
- nerve conduction studies;
- SPEP=
- serum protein electrophoresis;
- VA=
- Veterans Affairs
Footnotes
Go to Neurology.org for full disclosures. Funding information and disclosures deemed relevant by the authors, if any, are provided at the end of the article.
- Received March 1, 2016.
- Accepted in final form May 12, 2016.
- © 2016 American Academy of Neurology
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Letters: Rapid online correspondence
- Author Response Re: Following outdated guidelines does not translate to "using best evidence"
- James F. Burke, Assistant Professor, University of Michigan, Department of Neurology[email protected]
- Brian Callaghan, University of Michigan, Department of Neurology
Submitted September 30, 2016 - Following outdated guidelines does not translate to "using best evidence"
- James C. Johnston, Consultant Neurologist, Legal Medicine Consultants, San Antonio, TX[email protected]
- Thomas P. Sartwelle, Houston, TX
Submitted September 27, 2016 - More headache neuroimaging is not evidence based and likely to cause net harm
- James F Burke, Assistant Professor, University of Michigan, Department of Neurology[email protected]
- Brian Callaghan, University of Michigan Department of Neurology
Submitted September 19, 2016 - On the proper use of neuroimaging in headache
- James C. Johnston, Legal Medicine Consultants, San Antonio, TX;, [email protected]
- Thomas P. Sartwelle, Deans and Lyons, LLP, Houston, TX
Submitted September 09, 2016
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