During the study period of 2012 to 2019, median hospital length of stay dropped 5 days to 4 days, and while-in-hospital mortality rates fell from 6.3% to 4.1%. These improved outcomes also reduced overall costs for each episode, offsetting some of the increase in treatment cost. The study of 75,525 patients with IS used the Medicare 5% Research Identifiable Files (2012-2019) from the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services. “To our knowledge, no study has examined the relative contribution of treatment and neuroimaging on ischemic stroke hospital costs over the period in which consensus statements, recommendations, and guidelines changed for stroke treatment,” said lead researcher Pina Sanelli, MD, MPH, FACR, Professor at the Donald and Barbara Zucker School of Medicine at Hofstra/Northwell. “Hence, our objective was to examine the association of treatment and neuroimaging with IS total hospital cost growth for the Medicare fee-for-service population.”
The five most significant predictors of higher episode costs were treatment with EVT, longer hospital stays, arrival by transfer, severe stroke, and treatment with IVT. The results do not support that imaging is a primary hospital cost driver between 2012 and 2019. “Fortunately, given the improvements in stroke treatment and the associated reductions in post-treatment costs that muted cost growth that we observed, it appears stroke cost growth between 2012 and 2030 may be less than projected,” said Executive Director of the Neiman Institute, Elizabeth Rula, PhD.
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About the Harvey L. Neiman Health Policy Institute
The Harvey L. Neiman Health Policy Institute is one of the nation’s leading medical imaging socioeconomic research organizations. The Neiman Institute studies the role and value of radiology and radiologists in evolving health care delivery and payment systems and the impact of medical imaging on the cost, quality, safety and efficiency of health care. Visit us at www.neimanhpi.org and follow us on Twitter, LinkedIn and Facebook.