Philips' direct-to-angio stroke pathway: new analysis demonstrates substantial cost savings in addition to improved patient outcomes

In This Article:

Royal Philips
Royal Philips

Philips Neuro suite

June 14, 2023

Economic analysis of cost of Vall d’Hebron University Hospital Stroke Unit shows direct-to-angio stroke pathway can save more than USD 3,000 per patient

Amsterdam, the Netherlands – Royal Philips (NYSE: PHG, AEX: PHIA), a global leader in health technology, today announced the results of a health economic analysis published in the Journal of NeuroInterventional Surgery (JNIS) that show an innovative approach to the stroke care pathway reduced costs by an average of EUR 2,848 (~USD 3,120) per patient. The retrospective analysis looked at data from the controlled single-center ANGIOCAT clinical trial conducted at the Vall d’Hebron University Hospital Stroke Unit (Barcelona, Spain) [1]. Earlier results from this study demonstrated that a ‘Direct-to-Angio Suite’ (DTAS) pathway improves clinical outcomes for patients who have suffered a stroke.

“The ANGIOCAT clinical study has already shown that bringing stroke patients directly to the angio suite improves patient outcomes. The economic analysis of the data now tells us we can also significantly reduce costs,” said Dr. Manuel Requena, Stroke and Interventional Neurologist, University Hospital Vall d’Hebron. “This indicates that the initial up-front investment of a direct-to-angio suite workflow will result in a fast return on investment for healthcare providers.”

Innovating the stroke pathway
After initial triage in the emergency department, the typical treatment pathway for stroke involves sending the patient to the radiology department for a diagnostic CT or MRI brain scan. This adds time, often worsened by gaps in communication, information, and access to stroke expertise. For stroke centers, a time-saving alternative is to have a dedicated angio-suite permanently on standby, to which stroke patients can be transferred immediately after admission. Using cone-beam CT imaging, such as that built into Philips Image Guided Therapy System – Azurion, clinicians can make a diagnosis and intervene on-the-spot, saving precious time. The health economics analysis indicates that a positive return on investing in a dedicated angio suite can be achieved in only a few years.

Philips cone-beam CT
Philips’ DTAS workflow is enabled by an advanced cone-beam computed tomography (CBCT) brain scan performed directly in the angio suite to diagnose patients. CBCT utilizes a cone-shaped beam of X-rays and a flat-panel detector mounted on a C-arm gantry similar to that routinely used in an angio suite, capturing multiple images from different angles to reconstruct 3D images of the brain. Thanks to technology breakthroughs, Philips has increased the diagnostic confidence of CBCT from 32% to 93% in the space of a few years [3][4][5]. This technology can rule out intracranial hemorrhages and identify large vessel occlusions (LVOs), which account for roughly a quarter to a half of acute ischemic strokes [2]. Patients diagnosed with an LVO can then be immediately operated on using a minimally invasive image-guided procedure known as a mechanical thrombectomy to open up the blocked artery causing their stroke.