Abstract

BackgroundScreening for coronary artery disease (CAD) remains broadly performed in patients with type 2 diabetes (T2DM), although the lack of evidence. We conduct a real-world evidence (RWE) study to assess the risk of major clinical outcomes and economic impact of routine CAD screening in T2DM individuals at a very high cardiovascular risk.MethodsSCADIAB is a comparative nationwide cohort study using data from the French National Health Data System. The main inclusion criteria are: age ≥ 40 years, DT2 diagnosed for ≥ 7 years, with ≥ 2 additional cardiovascular risk factors plus a history of microvascular or macrovascular disease, except CAD. We estimated ≥ 90,000 eligible participants for our study. Data will be extracted from 01/01/2008 to 31/12/2019. Eligible participants will be identified during a first 7-year selection period (2008–2015). Each participant will be assigned either in experimental (CAD screening procedure during the selection period) or control group (no CAD screening) on 01/01/2015, and followed for 5 years. The primary endpoint is the incremental cost per life year saved over 5 years in CAD screening group versus no CAD screening. The main secondary endpoints are: total 5-year direct costs of each strategy; incidence of major cardiovascular (acute coronary syndrome, hospitalization for heart failure, coronary revascularization or all-cause death), cerebrovascular (hospitalization for transient ischemic attack, stroke, or carotid revascularization) and lower-limb events (peripheral artery disease, ischemic diabetic foot, lower-limb revascularization or amputation); and the budget impact for the French Insurance system to promote the cost-effective strategy. Analyses will be adjusted for a high-dimension propensity score taking into account known and unknown confounders. SCADIAB has been funded by the French Ministry of Health and the protocol has been approved by the French ethic authorities. Data management and analyses will start in the second half of 2021.DiscussionSCADIAB is a large and contemporary RWE study that will assess the economic and clinical impacts of routine CAD screening in T2DM people at a very high cardiovascular risk. It will also evaluate the clinical practice regarding CAD screening and help to make future recommendations and optimize the use of health care resources.Trial registration ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier: NCT04534530 (https://clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/show/NCT04534530)

Highlights

  • Screening for coronary artery disease (CAD) remains broadly performed in patients with type 2 diabe‐ tes (T2DM), the lack of evidence

  • Study population Inclusion criteria Eligible participants must meet all of the following criteria: Age = 40 years or older, Affiliation to the general health insurance scheme in France, Diagnosis of Type 2 Diabetes mellitus (T2DM), Duration of T2DM ≥ 7 years, Two or more additional cardiovascular risk factors (obesity, hypertension, hypercholesterolemia, or tobacco smoking using the chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) as a proxy), At least one microvascular or macrovascular disease: carotid stenosis, transient ischemic attack (TIA), stroke, lower-limb peripheral artery disease (PAD), chronic kidney disease (CKD), severe diabetic retinopathy with requirement of laser photocoagulation, or peripheral or autonomic diabetic neuropathy

  • We will conduct a large real-world evidence (RWE) study to investigate the risk of major clinical outcomes and economic impact of routine CAD screening in individuals with T2DM and a very high risk for cardiovascular disease in France

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Summary

Introduction

Screening for coronary artery disease (CAD) remains broadly performed in patients with type 2 diabe‐ tes (T2DM), the lack of evidence. We conduct a real-world evidence (RWE) study to assess the risk of major clinical outcomes and economic impact of routine CAD screening in T2DM individuals at a very high cardiovascular risk. Previous randomized controlled trial (RCT) did not provide evidence that routine screening for silent CAD may reduce the incidence of major cardiovascular events and death in people with T2DM [11,12,13,14,15]. One previous study showed that screening for silent CAD, compared with no screening, was associated with a reduced risk of minor cardiovascular events in T2DM patients with at least 2 cardiovascular risk factors [16].

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