Project 171019

Evaluating and Improving the Quality of Care and Outcomes of Percutaneous Coronary Interventions in Canada

171019

Evaluating and Improving the Quality of Care and Outcomes of Percutaneous Coronary Interventions in Canada

$300,000
Project Information
Study Type: Other Health_Services_Research
Therapeutic Area: Cardiology
Research Theme: Health systems / services
Disease Area: heart disease
Data Type: Canadian
Institution & Funding
Principal Investigator(s): Ko, Dennis
Institution: Institute for Clinical Evaluative Sciences-Toronto
CIHR Institute: Health Services and Policy Research
Program: CIHR New Investigator
Peer Review Committee: Health Research Salary A
Competition Year: 2008
Term: 5 yrs 0 mth
Abstract Summary

Heart disease continues to be the leading cause of morbidity and mortality in Canada. Recently, treatment of heart disease patients has increasingly relied upon minimally invasive procedures such as Percutaneous Coronary Intervention, commonly known as angioplasty. Angioplasty is a procedure that can unblock a coronary artery without the use of open-heart surgery. Most angioplasty procedures involve using a balloon catheter and a stent to push the blockage against the arterial wall and thereby reducing the narrowing of the artery. In the past decade, the number of angioplasty procedures has more than doubled in Canada. In fact, angioplasty has surpassed bypass surgery as the most common procedure to treat heart disease patients. Although angioplasty is very popular, there is evidence to suggest that angioplasty is not being used optimally across Canada. For example, we do not know whether patients are getting good or bad angioplasty, or whether angioplasty is being overused, underused or misused. Our ambitious goal is to set national standards to understand and measure the quality of care and outcomes of angioplasty across Canada. We will call on experts across Canada to develop new Canadian angioplasty standards. They will be asked to rate different aspects of angioplasty as unimportant, fairly important, and very important. In this way, a standard of what is a good angioplasty will be developed. We will then look at whether these standards are being met in patient across Canada who receives angioplasty. This kind of initiative on angioplasty has never been done in Canada. The standard we develop can be applied to every angioplasty patient in Canada. It will serve to ensure angioplasty procedures are being used in the most appropriate and effective manner. Our ultimate goal is to see outcome improvement among all patients receiving angioplasty in Canada.

Research Characteristics

This project includes the following research characteristics:

Big Data Analytics
Cost Effectiveness
Budget Impact
Health Technology Assessment
Resource Utilization
Implementation Science
Policy Evaluation
Health System Integration
Scalability Assessment
Barrier Identification
Patient Reported Outcomes
Real World Evidence
Patient Engagement
Data Sharing
Comorbidity Focus
Health Equity
Registry Linkage
Multicenter
Knowledge Translation Focus
Equity Considerations
Safety Focus
Quality of Life
Time to Event
Composite Endpoint
Study Justification

"Our ambitious goal is to set national standards to understand and measure the quality of care and outcomes of angioplasty across Canada."

Novelty Statement

"The standard we develop can be applied to every angioplasty patient in Canada."

Methodology Innovation

developing national standards for quality of care and outcomes of percutaneous coronary interventions in Canada

Keywords
Determinants Of Outcomes Health Services Utilization Percutaneous Coronary Interventions Performance Measures Quality Of Care