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Erschienen in: Journal of Nuclear Cardiology 6/2009

01.12.2009 | Abstracts/Proceedings

Assessing the need for nuclear cardiology and other advanced cardiac imaging modalities in the developing world

verfasst von: João V. Vitola, MD, PhD, Leslee J. Shaw, PhD, Adel H. Allam, MD, Pilar Orellana, MD, Amalia Peix, MD, Annare Ellmann, MD, Kevin C. Allman, MD, B. N. Lee, MD, Chanika Siritara, MD, Felix Y. J. Keng, MD, Gianmario Sambuceti, MD, Marla C. Kiess, MD, Raffaele Giubbini, MD, Salaheddine E. Bouyoucef, MD, Zuo-Xiang He, MD, Gregory S. Thomas, MD, MPH, Fernando Mut, MD, Maurizio Dondi, MD

Erschienen in: Journal of Nuclear Cardiology | Ausgabe 6/2009

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Abstract

Background

In 2005, 80% of cardiovascular disease (CVD) deaths occurred in low- to middle-income countries (i.e., developing nations). Cardiovascular imaging, such as myocardial perfusion SPECT, is one method that may be applied to detect and foster improved detection of at-risk patients. This document will review the availability and utilization for nuclear cardiology procedures worldwide and propose strategies to devise regional centers of excellence to achieve quality imaging around the world.

Methods

As a means to establish the current state of nuclear cardiology, International Atomic Energy Agency member and non-member states were queried as to annual utilization of nuclear cardiology procedures. Other sources for imaging statistics included data from medical societies (American Society of Nuclear Cardiology, European Society of Cardiology, and the European Association of Nuclear Medicine) and nuclear cardiology working groups within several nations. Utilization was calculated by dividing annual procedural volume by 2007 population statistics (/100,000) and categorized as high (>1,000/100,000), moderate-high (250-999/100,000), moderate (100-249/100,000), low-moderate (50-99/100,000) and low (<50/100,000).

Results

High nuclear cardiology utilization was reported in the United States, Canada, and Israel. Most Western European countries, Australia, and Japan reported moderate-high utilization. With the exception of Argentina, Brazil, Colombia and Uruguay, South America had low usage. This was also noted across Eastern Europe, Russia, and Asia. Utilization patterns generally mirrored each country’s gross domestic product. However, nuclear cardiology utilization was higher for developing countries neighboring moderate-high “user” countries (e.g., Algeria and Egypt); perhaps the result of accessible high-quality training programs.

Conclusions

Worldwide utilization patterns for nuclear cardiology vary substantially and may be influenced by physician access to training and education programs. Development of regional training centers of excellence can guide utilization of nuclear cardiology through the application of guideline- and appropriateness-driven testing, training, continuing education, and quality assurance programs aiding developing nations to confront the epidemics of CVD.
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Metadaten
Titel
Assessing the need for nuclear cardiology and other advanced cardiac imaging modalities in the developing world
verfasst von
João V. Vitola, MD, PhD
Leslee J. Shaw, PhD
Adel H. Allam, MD
Pilar Orellana, MD
Amalia Peix, MD
Annare Ellmann, MD
Kevin C. Allman, MD
B. N. Lee, MD
Chanika Siritara, MD
Felix Y. J. Keng, MD
Gianmario Sambuceti, MD
Marla C. Kiess, MD
Raffaele Giubbini, MD
Salaheddine E. Bouyoucef, MD
Zuo-Xiang He, MD
Gregory S. Thomas, MD, MPH
Fernando Mut, MD
Maurizio Dondi, MD
Publikationsdatum
01.12.2009
Verlag
Springer-Verlag
Erschienen in
Journal of Nuclear Cardiology / Ausgabe 6/2009
Print ISSN: 1071-3581
Elektronische ISSN: 1532-6551
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s12350-009-9104-y

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