Layfield L J, Bentz J S, Gopez E V
Department of Pathology, University of Utah School of Medicine, Salt Lake City, Utah, USA.
Cancer. 2001 Oct 25;93(5):319-22. doi: 10.1002/cncr.9046.
A significant body of literature exists supporting the cost effectiveness of fine-needle aspiration (FNA) cytology in the work-up of patients with potential neoplastic disease. Several authorities have stated that immediate, on-site smear evaluation by cytopathologists optimizes diagnostic accuracy and minimizes the technique's insufficiency rate. This favorable effect on FNA diagnostic accuracy is most pronounced for deep body sites, where FNA is guided by computed tomography (CT), ultrasound, bronchoscopy, or endoscopy. Little data exist regarding whether compensation from Medicare is adequate to support the pathologist in this endeavor compared with other potentially more remunerative activities, including routine surgical pathology sign-out, nongynecologic cytopathology sign-out, and frozen section consultation.
The authors studied a series of 142 fine-needle aspirates with immediate, on-site evaluations performed under a variety of clinical settings. These included bronchoscopic, endoscopic, ultrasound-guided, and CT-guided biopsies along with palpation-directed biopsies performed by either cytopathologists or clinicians. For these aspirates, total pathologist attendance time was calculated and correlated with guidance technique, target organ, location where aspirate was performed, and nature of aspirator. Fifty frozen section evaluations were timed similarly. For comparison purposes, cytopathologists' costs were calculated using the 80th percentile pay level of an associate professor with full-time clinical duties. Medicare rate schedules were used to calculate compensation. Including salary and benefits, the pathologist cost was approximately $88.83 per hour.
On average, an intraprocedural FNA evaluation for a CT-guided biopsy required 48.7 minutes, an ultrasound-guided biopsy required 44.4 minutes of pathologist time, an endoscopic procedure required 56.2 minutes, a bronchoscopic procedure required 55.3 minutes, a clinic aspirate performed by a pathologist required 42.5 minutes, and a clinic FNA performed by a clinician required 34.7 minutes. The average frozen section required 15.7 minutes of pathologist time for performance and interpretation. With the exception of FNA performed in clinic by the cytopathologist, time costs exceeded compensation by $40-50 per procedure. Clinic aspirates performed by a clinician and immediately evaluated by a pathologist resulted in a deficit of approximately $18 over actual time cost.
From the current data, it appears that intraprocedural consultations by cytopathologists for CT-guided, ultrasound-guided, bronchoscopic, or endoscopic procedures are compensated insufficiently by current Medicare compensation schedules using the CPT code 88172 for on-site evaluation. Only when the cytopathologist personally performs the aspirate and immediately interprets it (CPT codes 88172 and 88170) does the Medicare payment adequately compensate for professional services.
大量文献支持细针穿刺(FNA)细胞学检查在潜在肿瘤性疾病患者检查中的成本效益。一些权威人士指出,由细胞病理学家进行即时现场涂片评估可优化诊断准确性并将该技术的不足率降至最低。这种对FNA诊断准确性的有利影响在深部身体部位最为明显,在这些部位,FNA由计算机断层扫描(CT)、超声、支气管镜或内镜引导。与其他可能更有利可图的活动(包括常规手术病理报告、非妇科细胞病理报告和冰冻切片会诊)相比,关于医疗保险的补偿是否足以支持病理学家开展此项工作的数据很少。
作者研究了一系列142例细针穿刺样本,这些样本在各种临床环境下进行了即时现场评估。这些包括支气管镜、内镜、超声引导和CT引导活检,以及由细胞病理学家或临床医生进行的触诊引导活检。对于这些穿刺样本,计算了病理学家的总出勤时间,并将其与引导技术、靶器官、穿刺部位和穿刺者性质相关联。对50次冰冻切片评估进行了类似的计时。为了进行比较,使用具有全职临床职责的副教授的第80百分位薪酬水平计算细胞病理学家的成本。使用医疗保险费率表计算补偿。包括工资和福利,病理学家的成本约为每小时88.83美元。
平均而言,CT引导活检的术中FNA评估需要48.7分钟,超声引导活检需要病理学家44.4分钟,内镜检查需要56.2分钟,支气管镜检查需要55.3分钟,病理学家在诊所进行的穿刺需要42.5分钟,临床医生在诊所进行的FNA需要34.7分钟。平均冰冻切片进行和解读需要病理学家15.