By Robert M. Goldberg on 11.18.09 @ 6:07AM
Obamacare rationing is now in business -- and not only on
mammograms but also on screening for heart disease in women.
Think Congress is regretting having allocated over a
billion dollars to let the government generate studies to tell us
what medical tests and procedures should be covered under
Obamacare?
In the wake of the U.S. Preventive Services Task Force
recommendation to tell women in their forties to take a hike on
mammograms, and to suggest that other screening technologies
aren't worth the money, I bet it won't be long before that budget
and the agency that has it and also controls the information the
Task Force uses to make such wise decisions, the Agency for
Healthcare Research and Quality, are the subjects of
congressional hearings.
The breast cancer recommendations come in a 30-page review
of 10 studies that even the authors admit cannot be generalized
to individual forms of breast cancer and different groups of
patients .
But there's more. The Task Force on Monday also issued a
second recommendation that has received no media coverage -- on
screening for heart disease. Because heart disease kills more
women than breast cancer, that decision could be even more
dangerous for women because it is based on -- or biased towards
-- old, even outdated methods for determining risk for a serious
illness.
The Task Force rejected the use of a test for heart
inflammation called C-reactive protein (CRP) as a reliable
predictor of risk of heart disease. Instead, it said doctors
should stick to a rule of thumb called the Framingham Risk
Evaluation (FRE).
The FRE uses the number of fatal and
nonfatal heart attacks suffered by workers in Framingham,
Massachusetts, within a ten-year period, and it is based on a
summary estimate of major risk factors for coronary heart
disease, such as age, blood pressure, blood cholesterol levels
and smoking.
How did the Task Force conclude CRP testing is worthless?
The Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality told them so based
on "the evidence."
But AHRQ ignored three recent studies demonstrating the
importance of CRP. A 2005 study from Johns Hopkins and funded by
the National Institutes of Health found that the FRE fails to identify approximately one-third of
women likely to develop coronary heart disease. Many women deemed
"low risk" by the geniuses at AHRQ had had coronary
atherosclerosis, which even the Task Force will admit predicts
heart attacks.
Second, it ignored the
JUPITER ("Justification for the Use of
Statins in Primary Prevention: An Intervention Trial Evaluating
Rosuvastatin") study. That experiment tested whether giving
healthy people with low LDL cholesterol levels but high hs-CRP
levels would reduce death from heart attacks. It did. Or more to
the point, it showed that screening CRP along with cholesterol
tests can cut the incidence of heart disease by 40 percent in
high risk individuals with statins and reduce death from heart
disease by 20 percent.
Third, the Task Force, in a rush to save a buck for
Obamacare, skated past the most recent findings from JUPITER that
apply particularly to women. Forty percent of JUPITER's
participants were women 60 and over with low cholesterol and no
history of heart disease but were tested and found to have high
levels of inflammation. It turns out that women are more likely
to benefit from testing and treatment than men: the incidence of
heart disease of any form was cut by 46 percent in women over 60
compared to 42 percent in men over 50.
But that's not the Task Force recommendation. Instead, the
Task Force, relying on a review of studies and research that
ignored these important findings and stopped looking in 2002,
just when the understanding of CRP as a predictor was in its
infancy, came to a pre-ordained conclusion that conveniently fits
the party line that so-called evidence-based medicine can
actually reduce the cost of care even as government creates a new
health care entitlement.
The one-size fits all recommendation for breast cancer
screening ignored the fact that breast cancer is not just one
disease, but many related illnesses with different pathways and
signatures. Worse, it acknowledged the wide variation that makes
individualized risk assessment essential but went on to claim it
wasn't worth the effort. And it failed to estimate the impact of
telling women to simply go away. It took years to build up
screening rates to where new drugs could have an impact on
mortality. Now all that could be undone.
Similarly, the failure to take into account advances in
testing and treatment, insights that will save the lives of
thousands of women, is hard to explain, let alone justify. Dr.
Diane Petitti, vice chair of the Task Force, maintains: "we have
to say what we see based on the science and the data."
But if you only see what you are shown, then what you see
or say isn't really science. It's politics. And if you think
these two decisions were controversial, just wait. With billions
to spend and a high profile, the AHRQ and its Preventive
Services Task Force will turn prevention into just another
word for saying "no" to medical innovation.
topics:
Obamacare, Breast Cancer, Preventive Medicine