Risk-Stratified Screening for Colorectal Cancer Using Genetic and Environmental Risk Factors: A Cost-Effectiveness Analysis Based on Real-World Data

被引:9
|
作者
van den Puttelaar, Rosita [1 ,8 ]
Meester, Reinier G. S. [1 ]
Peterse, Elisabeth F. P. [1 ,2 ]
Zauber, Ann G. [3 ]
Zheng, Jiayin [2 ]
Hayes, Richard B. [4 ]
Su, Yu-Ru [2 ,5 ]
Lee, Jeffrey K. [6 ,7 ]
Thomas, Minta [2 ]
Sakoda, Lori C. [2 ,6 ]
Li, Yi [2 ]
Corley, Douglas A. [6 ,7 ]
Peters, Ulrike [2 ]
Hsu, Li [2 ]
Lansdorp-Vogelaar, Iris [1 ]
机构
[1] Erasmus MC, Dept Publ Hlth, Rotterdam, Netherlands
[2] Fred Hutchinson Canc Res Ctr, Publ Hlth Sci Div, Seattle, WA USA
[3] Mem Sloan Kettering Canc Ctr, Dept Epidemiol & Biostat, New York, NY USA
[4] NYU, Sch Med, Dept Populat Hlth, Div Epidemiol, New York, NY USA
[5] Kaiser Permanente Washington Hlth Res Inst, Biostat Unit, Seattle, WA USA
[6] Kaiser Permanente Northern Calif, Div Res, Oakland, CA USA
[7] Kaiser Permanente San Francisco, Dept Gastroenterol, San Francisco, CA USA
[8] Erasmus MC, Dept Publ Hlth, POB 2040, NL-3000 CA Rotterdam, Netherlands
关键词
Colorectal Cancer; Screening; Cost-Effectiveness; Genetic Risk; Environmental Risk;
D O I
10.1016/j.cgh.2023.03.003
中图分类号
R57 [消化系及腹部疾病];
学科分类号
摘要
BACKGROUND & AIMS: Previous studies on the cost-effectiveness of personalized colorectal cancer (CRC) screening were based on hypothetical performance of CRC risk prediction and did not consider the association with competing causes of death. In this study, we estimated the cost-effectiveness of risk-stratified screening using real-world data for CRC risk and competing causes of death.METHODS: Risk predictions for CRC and competing causes of death from a large community-based cohort were used to stratify individuals into risk groups. A microsimulation model was used to opti-mize colonoscopy screening for each risk group by varying the start age (40-60 years), end age (70-85 years), and screening interval (5-15 years). The outcomes included personalized screening ages and intervals and cost-effectiveness compared with uniform colonoscopy screening (ages 45-75, every 10 years). Key assumptions were varied in sensitivity analyses.RESULTS: Risk-stratified screening resulted in substantially different screening recommendations, ranging from a one-time colonoscopy at age 60 for low-risk individuals to a colonoscopy every 5 years from ages 40 to 85 for high-risk individuals. Nevertheless, on a population level, risk-stratified screening would increase net quality-adjusted life years gained (QALYG) by only 0.7% at equal costs to uniform screening or reduce average costs by 1.2% for equal QALYG. The benefit of risk-stratified screening improved when it was assumed to increase participation or costs less per genetic test.CONCLUSIONS: Personalized screening for CRC, accounting for competing causes of death risk, could result in highly tailored individual screening programs. However, average improvements across the population in QALYG and cost-effectiveness compared with uniform screening are small.
引用
收藏
页码:3415 / 3423.e29
页数:38
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