Abstract

Background: Participation in cardiac rehabilitation (CR) is recommended for all patients with coronary artery disease (CAD) following hospitalization for acute coronary syndrome or stenting. Yet, few patients participate due to the inconvenience and high cost of attending a facility-based program, factors which have been magnified during the ongoing COVID pandemic. Based on a retrospective analysis of CR utilization and cost in a third-party payer environment, we forecasted the potential clinical and economic benefits of delivering a home-based, virtual CR program, with the goal of guiding future implementation efforts to expand CR access.Methods: We performed a retrospective cohort study using insurance claims data from a large, third-party payer in the state of Pennsylvania. Primary diagnostic and procedural codes were used to identify patients admitted for CAD between October 1, 2016, and September 30, 2018. Rates of enrollment in facility-based CR, as well as all-cause and cardiovascular hospital readmission and associated costs, were calculated during the 12-months following discharge.Results: Only 37% of the 7,264 identified eligible insured patients enrolled in a facility-based CR program within 12 months, incurring a mean delivery cost of $2,922 per participating patient. The 12-month all-cause readmission rate among these patients was 24%, compared to 31% among patients who did not participate in CR. Furthermore, among those readmitted, CR patients were readmitted less frequently than non-CR patients within this time period. The average per-patient cost from hospital readmissions was $30,814 per annum. Based on these trends, we forecasted that adoption of virtual CR among patients who previously declined CR would result in an annual cost savings between $1 and $9 million in the third-party healthcare system from a combination of increased overall CR enrollment and fewer hospital readmissions among new HBCR participants.Conclusions: Among insured patients eligible for CR in a third-party payer environment, implementation of a home-based virtual CR program is forecasted to yield significant cost savings through a combination of increased CR participation and a consequent reduction in downstream healthcare utilization.

Highlights

  • Cardiac rehabilitation (CR) is recommended for patients with coronary artery disease (CAD) to reduce the risk of hospital readmission and cardiovascular (CV) death after an acute myocardial infarction (MI) or coronary procedure [1, 2]

  • There is a clear need to develop effective and patient-centric alternatives to expand CR access for eligible patients [4]. This need has only been magnified by the emergence of new safety considerations for higher-risk patients from travel and social exposure as well as the need for many centerbased CR (CBCR) programs to operate on more restricted schedules and reduced patient appointments during the ongoing COVID pandemic

  • CR participation was higher among patients 60 years; z = 7.04; p < 0.001); consistent with this finding, participation was higher in patients with commercial compared to senior-oriented (e.g., Medicare Advantage) insurance plans (42 vs. 31%; z = 9.42; p < 0.001; see Supplementary Tables 2, 3)

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Summary

Introduction

Cardiac rehabilitation (CR) is recommended for patients with coronary artery disease (CAD) to reduce the risk of hospital readmission and cardiovascular (CV) death after an acute myocardial infarction (MI) or coronary procedure [1, 2]. There is a clear need to develop effective and patient-centric alternatives to expand CR access for eligible patients [4] This need has only been magnified by the emergence of new safety considerations for higher-risk patients from travel and social exposure as well as the need for many CBCR programs to operate on more restricted schedules and reduced patient appointments during the ongoing COVID pandemic. Based on a retrospective analysis of CR utilization and cost in a third-party payer environment, we forecasted the potential clinical and economic benefits of delivering a home-based, virtual CR program, with the goal of guiding future implementation efforts to expand CR access

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