Another statewide initiative, now funded by Blue Cross Blue Shield of Michigan and headed by Hitinder Gurm, M.D., assistant professor of internal medicine, focuses on the safety and quality of coronary artery angioplasty (a procedure used to open blocked or narrowed heart arteries and improve blood flow to the heart) and stenting (inserting a tiny, mesh tube inside the artery to keep it open).
“For anyone in the state of Michigan who gets a stent in their heart, we follow their in-hospital outcome,” says Gurm. “We look at who these patients are, what kind of medical problems they have, what medications they’re on. And then we look at what happens with them: Do they survive? Do they develop kidney problems? Do they develop bleeding problems? We ask what kind of stents were used, what medications were given during the procedure, and whether, when they were sent home, someone talked to them about diet, smoking and cardiac rehab.”
After analyzing the data, Gurm and colleagues can compare hospitals and individual physicians. Based on their findings, the collaboratives’ advisory group, made up of physicians from participating hospitals, sets goals and works to reduce any problems.
Considering common practices
One such problem was kidney failure after coronary artery angioplasty. “This is a very rare event, so a practitioner might see it only once every three or four years and chalk it up to bad luck,” says Eagle. “But if you’re studying it in 35 hospitals, and you have all the details of how angioplasty is performed, you may discover preventable processes that actually cause the problem.”
That’s exactly what researchers discovered. During angioplasty, special dye, visible on an X-ray, is used to reveal the location and extent of blockages. The dye is essential to the procedure, but too much can be toxic to the kidneys.
“We found that we could calculate, based on a patient’s body weight and pre-procedure kidney function, the maximum amount of dye that should be used,” says Eagle, “and we demonstrated a six-fold increase in the incidence of dialysis-dependent renal failure if that amount was exceeded.”
Another revelation: Hospitals across the state varied widely in their use of blood transfusions after angioplasty, with some performing four to five times more transfusions than others. Transfusions can be lifesaving, but they also can cause allergic reactions and suppress the immune system, opening the door to infections. Couple those concerns with the limited resource of banked blood, and there’s a strong argument that only patients who really need transfusions should get them.
U-M was one of the hospitals on the high end of the transfusion spectrum. After evaluating its practices and reviewing the literature, the research team recommended adopting more conservative guidelines published by the American College of Physicians. “We went from being one of the highest users of transfusion to one of the lowest by discovering the problem, evaluating what we were doing, and creating a system to improve,” says Eagle.
Discover, evaluate, improve. That’s also the mantra for another collaborative project sponsored by Blue Cross Blue Shield of Michigan: the Michigan Anticoagulation Quality Improvement Initiative. In this project, Froehlich and colleagues are studying the use of the anti-clotting drug warfarin in patients with atrial fibrillation. The condition puts people at risk for developing blood clots in the heart, and if a clot breaks free and travels to the brain, it can cause stroke. Warfarin prevents clots from forming. But the drug carries its own risks — most notably severe, life-threatening bleeding — and patients who take it must have frequent blood tests to make sure they’re taking just the right amount.
Based on their research, Froehlich’s group recently reported that some 10 to 15 percent of atrial fibrillation patients taking warfarin may be at low enough risk for blood clots to stop taking the drug altogether.
Insights, not edicts
A key part of all of these projects is sharing information and conclusions through publications, presentations and face-to-face meetings with health care teams at participating hospitals in Michigan.
“We want to make sure that the clinicians and care teams have an opportunity to compare themselves to their colleagues across the state, and potentially make changes in their practices,” says Paul Michael Grossman, M.D., an associate professor of internal medicine who directs a Blue Cross Blue Shield of Michigan-funded initiative focused on evaluating peripheral vascular intervention — treatments designed to reopen blocked vessels in parts of the body other than the heart. “We send out the reports, but we also travel to hospitals and meet with the teams that take care of the patients — not just the physicians, but also the technicians and nurses and administrators.”
The point is not to deliver edicts, but to offer insights.
“We try not to prescribe how patients should be cared for, but we set a standard, set a bar,” says Grossman. “We’ve seen significant improvement across the consortium in many of the areas on which we’ve focused attention.”
Physicians and other caregivers welcome the shared wisdom and guidance, says Froehlich. “Every physician wants to do the best job for their patients, and arming them with information is often all you need to do to see changes. Through these Blue Cross Blue Shield initiatives, we empower caregivers to seek self-improvement, rather than try to impose someone else’s idea of improvement. It’s very much a carrot, rather than a stick, approach to quality improvement.”
But wait a minute — if physicians and hospitals everywhere are standardizing procedures and conforming to the same guidelines, isn’t there a danger of one-size-fits-all patient care? That’s a fair question, Gurm says, and it’s important to keep in mind that even the most thorough research may not show a clear advantage to doing things one way versus another. Some aspects of medical practice will always be less black-and-white than shaded in gray, and there should be room for physicians to exercise judgment based as much on interactions with patients as on results of studies. The hope is that comparative effectiveness research offers another tool to help physicians cope with the complexities of caring for human beings, with their many and varied needs, physical differences and combinations of conditions.
Another concern that’s often voiced is that comparative effectiveness findings could lead to health care rationing — those scary scenarios of elders being denied treatment and insurers refusing to pay for lifesaving therapies.
To that assertion, Eagle has a ready response: “We’re already rationing, but it’s what I call irrational rationing: People who have insurance get care, and people who don’t have insurance, don’t,” he says. “We have two choices at this moment in our medical heritage: one is to continue what we’re doing now; the other is to move toward ’rational rationing.’ Using things like comparative effectiveness research, we decide as a society how much we can afford for health care, what is the best buy for the amount of benefit to individuals and populations, and what is discretionary. We haven’t gotten there yet, but we need to get to that. Americans deserve better, and comparative effectiveness research is one tool that we can use to try to begin to do things rationally.”
Comparing Effectiveness, Changing Lives