Abstract

Clinical guidelines and scientific data increasingly support the appropriate use of cardiovascular magnetic resonance (CMR) imaging. The extent of CMR adoption across the United States (U.S.) remains unclear. This observational analysis aims to capture CMR practice patterns in the U.S. Commissioned reports from the Society of Cardiovascular Magnetic Resonance (SCMR), pre-existing survey data from CMR centers, and socioeconomic and coronary heart disease data from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention were used. The location of imaging centers performing CMR was based on 2018 Medicare claims. Secondary analysis was performed on center-specific survey data from 2017-2019, which were collected by members of the SCMR U.S. Advocacy Subcommittee for quality improvement purposes. Correlation between the number of imaging centers billing for CMR services per million persons, socioeconomic determinants, and coronary heart disease epidemiology was determined. A total of 591 imaging centers billed the Center for Medicare & Medicaid Services for CMR services in 2018 and 112 (of 155) unique CMR centers responded to the survey. In 2018, CMR services were available in almost all 50 states. Minnesota was the state with the highest number of CMR centers per million Medicare beneficiaries (52.6 centers per million), and Maine had the lowest (4.4 per million). The total density of CMR centers was 16 per million for U.S. Medicare beneficiaries. Sixty-eight percent (83 of 112) of survey responders were cardiologists, and 28% were radiologists. In 72% of centers, academic healthcare systems performed 81-100% of CMR exams. The number of high-volume centers (>500 scans per year) increased by seven between 2017-2019. In 2019, 53% of centers were considered high-volume centers and had an average of 19 years of experience. Centers performing <50 scans had an of average 3.5 years' experience. Approximate patient wait time for a CMR exam was 2 weeks to 1 month. Despite increasing volume and availability in almost all 50 states, CMR access remains geographically variable. Advocacy efforts to improve access and innovations that reduce imaging time and exam complexity have potential to increase adoption of CMR technology.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call