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Comparative Costs Versus Symptomatic and Employment Benefits of Medical and Surgical Treatment of Stable Angina Pectoris

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1985

Year

Abstract

For patients who underwent cardiac catheterization for stable angina pectoris at the authors' hospital, initial treatment charges including the cardiac catheterization were approximately $28,000 for coronary surgery and $6,000 for medical therapy. Even after controlling for disease severity and after including medical patients who crossed over to surgery, the slightly increased 3-year follow-up costs of medical therapy offset only approximately 11% of the far higher initial costs of surgery. Surgical patients were more likely to have sustained, substantial symptomatic improvement at 3 years (68% vs. 53%, P < 0.05) but were no more likely to have, maintain, or regain a job. Although the cost-effectiveness of coronary surgery may compare favorably with other modern therapies for other conditions, coronary surgery did not pay for itself at 3-year follow-up in our patients.