PT - JOURNAL ARTICLE AU - K Edwards AU - N Jones AU - J Newton AU - C Foster AU - A Judge AU - K Jackson AU - NK Arden AU - R Pinedo-Villanueva TI - THE COST EFFECTIVENESS OF EXERCISE-BASED CARDIAC REHABILITATION: A SYSTEMATIC REVIEW AID - 10.1136/bjsports-2016-096900.4 DP - 2016 Nov 01 TA - British Journal of Sports Medicine PG - 1351--1351 VI - 50 IP - 21 4099 - http://bjsm.bmj.com/content/50/21/1351.1.short 4100 - http://bjsm.bmj.com/content/50/21/1351.1.full SO - Br J Sports Med2016 Nov 01; 50 AB - Aims Economic evaluations provide a useful comparative approach for considering costs and consequences on patient outcomes, thus providing a foundation for effective policy and decision making.1 2 This descriptive review aims to better understand how economic evaluations of cardiac rehabilitation (CR) services are conducted to inform future research addressing the impact of a physical exercise component on cost-effectiveness.Methods Electronic databases were searched for economic evaluations of exercise-based CR programs published in English between 2000 and 2014. The methodological quality of included economic evaluations was reviewed using criteria taken from the Consolidated Health Economic Evaluation Reporting Standards (CHEERS) statement.3 Results Fifteen economic studies met the eligibility criteria but exhibited wide variability in study perspective, time horizon, setting, comparators and included costs, with significant heterogeneity for exercise dose between interventions. Ten evaluations were based on randomised controlled trials (RCTs) with time horizons between 6–24 months, but which largely produced weak or inconclusive results. Excluding two modelling studies, only three studies utilised longer time horizons (3.5–5 years), and findings suggest exercise-based CR leads to lowered costs, reduced rehospitalisation's and longer cumulative lifetime in the long-term.Conclusions Variability in CR program delivery and exercise dose along with weak consistency between study perspective and included costs makes it difficult to compare cost and health outcomes between studies and accumulate evidence in support of a particular exercise regime. The dominance of RCTs with their extensive patient selectivity process and exclusion of comorbid patients questions whether cost-effectiveness findings would translate to a real-world setting. The use of longer time horizons would be more compatible with a chronic condition and allow the long-term effects of exercise-based CR to be evaluated.