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Evaluating Rotator Cuff Tears by Ultrasound Combined with Preoperative MRI Is Cost Effective

By MedImaging International staff writers
Posted on 08 Jun 2011
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While ultrasound is typically seen as more cost-effective, magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) is most frequently used to evaluate the rotator cuff. When performing a cost utility analysis, utilizing ultrasound as the initial imaging test for rotator cuff tear, along with preoperative MRI to identify alternative and concurrent diagnoses, can be a very effective hybrid imaging strategy, according to recent research.

The study's findings were presented May 2011 at the 2011 American Roentgen Ray Society's annual meeting in Chicago (IL, USA). The study performed at Duke University Medical Center (Durham, NC, USA) and Rush University Medical Center (Chicago, IL, USA) utilized three evaluation techniques: the use of ultrasound alone, MRI alone, and a hybrid strategy of ultrasound for all patients followed by MRI for those patients who required surgery.

"Several meta-analyses in the literature have found that ultrasound and MRI have similar accuracies for the evaluation of rotator cuff tears. Ultrasound is a cheaper imaging modality, yet MRI is much more frequently used for rotator cuff evaluation," said Robert Lee Suber, MD, lead author of the study. "The reasons for the preference of MRI may be related to the possibility of identifying alternative and/or concurrent diagnoses with MRI as well as surgeon preference for anatomic imaging prior to surgery," said Dr. Suber.

According to Dr. Suber, one of the imaging approaches he and his colleagues assessed was an initial screening test with ultrasound. All those patients who required surgery or failed conservative treatment would then have an MRI. The investigators found this to be more cost effective than the cost of everyone undergoing MRI as the initial assessment. There are cutoff values for accuracy of ultrasound and/or MRI where this combined imaging application is no longer cost effective over MRI alone. Furthermore, as the prevalence (pre-test probability) for rotator cuff tear increases, this combined imaging strategy decreases in cost savings over MRI alone, Dr. Suber reported.

"Our research shows that in populations with a lower pre-test probability of rotator cuff tear [e.g., patients seeing family practice physicians as opposed to a shoulder specialist surgeon] it may be more cost effective to initially to obtain an ultrasound. Then if the patient needs to have surgery, they can get an MRI," Dr. Suber concluded.

Related Links:

Duke University Medical Center
Rush University Medical Center


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