‘Dramatic’ rise in image-guided procedures performed by NPs and PAs rather than radiologists
There has been a dramatic rise in nurse practitioners and physician assistants performing certain image-guided procedures, according to an analysis published Thursday.
In particular, NPs and PAs have grabbed a growing share of Medicare reimbursement for the removal of fluid or gas from the lungs (thoracentesis) and abdomen (paracentesis).
Radiologists performed the majority of ultrasound-guided thoracentesis at nearly 74% in 2013. But their total share fell to 66% by 2018, during a time when advanced practice providers saw their share rise leap from 8% up to nearly 13%.
“The most striking trend in this study is the dramatic increase in volume of these procedures performed by APPs, which approximately doubled over the study period,” Rajoo Dhangana MD, a professor and interventional radiologist with the University of Pittsburgh Medical Center, and co-authors wrote March 24. “The great acceleration of this trend in the past decade, demonstrated in the present study, follows a national trend of increasing participation of APPs in clinical care, specifically in minimally invasive procedures,” they added later.
Researchers gathered their data from 2012-2018 Medicare claims for procedures performed with and without imaging guidance. Such “blind” delivery of thoracentesis decreased nearly 44% during the study period, down to 15,000 procedures in 2018. Meanwhile, the volume of imaging-guided needle insertion into the pleural space around the lungs climbed 19%, up to almost 223,000 during the same time.
Blind paracentesis volume also dropped during the study period, falling almost 30%, down to 12,000. On the other side, the volume of imaging guided, needle-based sampling of fluid from the peritoneal cavity leapt 48%, up to nearly 254,000 during the same time. Similar to thoracentesis, radiologists held the dominant share, delivering 84% of these procedures in 2012, which fell down to 77% by the end of the study period. APPs saw their own share increase “dramatically” from 10% up to 16%.
Hospitals and radiology departments have recognized the value of APPs performing minimally invasive procedures, the study authors noted. They can bill Medicare at about 85% of what physicians charge, with a salary at about one-third of radiologist pay.
“Therefore, having an increasing share of procedures safely performed by APPs can decrease costs and increase revenue for healthcare systems by freeing radiologists to perform a greater volume of image interpretation or more complex procedures,” Dhangana et al. wrote.