| Literature DB >> 19900264 |
Shalini L Kulasingam1, Raghu Rajan, Yvan St Pierre, C Victoria Atwood, Evan R Myers, Eduardo L Franco.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Recently published results from a large randomized trial (Canadian Cervical Cancer Screening Trial study group) suggest that human papillomavirus testing followed by Pap smear-based triage for human papillomavirus positive women may be an effective way to screen women for cervical cancer. We determined the potential cost-effectiveness of including human papillomavirus tests for cervical cancer screening for Canada and three provinces: Alberta, Newfoundland and Ontario.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2009 PMID: 19900264 PMCID: PMC2780455 DOI: 10.1186/1741-7015-7-69
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Med ISSN: 1741-7015 Impact factor: 8.775
Twenty-seven screening test strategies that differ by age of first screening, type of screening test and frequency of screening.
| Age when screening strategy begins | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 18 years | 25 years | 18-24 via Miller1, 25+ via strategy | |||
| Pap only | Pap1 | 1 (age 18 to 20) and 3 (age 21+) | X (Screening Strategy (SS) 1) | ||
| Pap | 1 | X (SS 2) | |||
| Pap | 2 | X (SS 3) | |||
| HPV testing only2 | HPV | 3 | X (SS 4) | X (SS 5) | X (SS 6) |
| HPV | 5 | X (SS 7) | X (SS 9) | X (SS 9) | |
| Co-testing3 | Pap + HPV | 2 | X (SS 10) | X (SS 11) | X (SS 12) |
| Pap + HPV | 3 | X (SS 13) | X (SS 14) | X (SS 15) | |
| Pap + HPV | 5 | X (SS 16) | X (SS 17) | X (SS 18) | |
| Triage (Pap followed by HPV)4 | Pap with HPV triage | 1 | X (SS 19) | X (SS 20) | X (SS 21) |
| Triage (HPV followed by Pap)5 | HPV with Pap triage | 3 | X (SS 22) | X (SS 23) | X (SS 24) |
| HPV with Pap triage | 5 | X (SS 25) | X (SS 26) | X (SS 27) | |
1 This is the current recommendation for screening in Canada[20] Women are screened annually from age 18 to 20, and then every three years (for age 21+). Women who have an ≥ LSIL test result are referred for colposcopy and biopsy. Women with an ASC-US Pap result have a repeat Pap test and are referred to colposcopy and biopsy if their test result shows ≥ ASC-US. Women with a normal Pap test result return to routine screening. This strategy is referred to as the Miller strategy.
2 Women who are HPV+ (using a 1 RLU cutpoint) are referred directly for colposcopy and biopsy. Women who are HPV- return to routine screening.
3 Women who are HPV+ or who have an ≥ ASC-US Pap result are referred directly for colposcopy and biopsy. Women who are HPV- and have a normal Pap test result return to routine screening.
4 Women with an ≥ ASC-US Pap result are assumed to have an HPV test. Women who are HPV+ are referred for colposcopy. Women who have discordant results receive repeat testing with an HPV test and are referred to colposcopy if they are HPV+. Women who have an initial or subsequent normal test result are assumed to return to routine screening.
5 Women who are HPV+ are assumed to have a Pap test. Women with an ≥ ASC-US Pap result are referred for colposcopy. Women with discordant test results are assumed to receive another HPV test and are referred to colposcopy if they are HPV+. Women with an initial or subsequent normal test result are assumed to return to routine screening.
Selected estimates for screening test accuracy, costs and utilities.
| Screening Adherence (1) | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| <20 | 0.5-0.75 (0.35-1.0) | ||
| 20-29 | 0.5-0.8 (0.35-1.0) | ||
| 30-39 | 0.7-0.9 (0.5-1.0) | ||
| 40-49 | 0.6-0.9 (0.4-1.0) | ||
| 50+ | 0.3-1.0 (0.2-1.0) | ||
| Screening Test Accuracy [ | |||
| Age <30 | Age 30+ | ||
| Pap sensitivity for CIN 1+ | 0.42 (0.31-0.72) | 0.32 (0.30-0.66) | |
| Pap specificity for <CIN 1 | 0.98 (0.80-0.95) | 0.94 (0.82-0.95) | |
| HPV sensitivity for CIN 1+ | 0.83 (0.68-1.0) | 0.71 (0.65-1.0) | |
| HPV specificity for <CIN 1 | 0.83 (0.80-0.97) | 0.97 (0.94-1.0) | |
| HPV and Pap sensitivity for CIN 1+ | 0.88 (0.72-1.0) | 0.75 (0.69-1.0) | |
| HPV and Pap specificity for <CIN 1 | 0.82 (0.79-0.96) | 0.95 (0.92-1.0) | |
| Costs in Canadian $ (2006)[ | |||
| Canada and Ontario | Alberta | Newfoundland | |
| Conventional Pap | $28 ($14-$56) | $30 ($15-$59) | $29 ($14-$58) |
| Liquid-based Pap | $32 ($16-64) | $35($17-$70) | $33 ($16-$65) |
| HPV test (hc2) | $53 ($14-$106) | $50 ($14-$100) | $53 ($14-$106) |
| Colposcopy + biopsy | $337 ($168-$673) | $376 ($188-$752) | $412 ($206-$824) |
| LEEP | $965 ($83-$1930) | $1082 ($541-$2164) | $1044 ($522-$2088) |
| Stage I Cancer | $11153 ($5576-$22305) | $12126 ($6063-$24253) | $11898 ($5949-$23797) |
| Stage II - III Cancer | $17644 ($8822-$35288) | $19185 ($9592-$38369) | $18824 ($9412-$37648) |
| Stage IV - Cancer | $24110 ($12055-$48220) | $26215 ($13107-$52430) | $25722 ($21861-$51445) |
| Utilities[ | |||
| False-positive screening test result | -.02 | ||
| Duration | 2 1/2 months[ | ||
| Stage I Cancer | 0.76 | ||
| Duration | 5 years 5 | ||
| Stage II - IV Cancer | 0.67 | ||
| Duration | 5 years 5 | ||
1 Ranges used for beta distributions for probabilistic sensitivity analyses
2 Estimates of sensitivity assumed to be the same for LBC; specificity estimated to be 0.84[23] of base estimate of specificity for conventional Pap.
3 Ranges used for normal distributions for costs for probabilistic sensitivity analyses
4 Cost per quality-adjusted life-year calculated in sensitivity analyses
5 Women who are alive at the end of 5 years are assumed to enter the cancer survivor state. The utility for a cancer survivor is assumed to be 1.
Figure 1Model estimated and observed age-specific cancer incidence curves for Canada and three provinces: Alberta, Ontario and Newfoundland.
Model predicted cancer (all stages) and false positive test results per 100,000 (Ontario).
| Strategy | False Positives | Cancer (All Stages) |
|---|---|---|
| HPV with Pap Triage, q5, age 18 (SS 25) | 7,044 | 679 |
| Miller at age 18, then HPV with Pap Triage, q5, age 25 | 11,404 | 658 |
| Miller at age 18, then HPV with Pap Triage, q3, age 25 | 14,160 | 411 |
| Miller strategy (Pap q1 beginning at age 18, then q3 at age 21) | 20,529 | 809 |
| HPV only, q5, age 25 | 22,437 | 586 |
| Pap only, q2, age 18 | 25,103 | 600 |
| Pap with HPV Triage, q1, age 25 | 27,660 | 364 |
| Pap and HPV, q5, age 25 | 30,817 | 548 |
| HPV only, q3, age 25 | 40,789 | 361 |
| HPV only, q5, age 18 | 40,957 | 538 |
| Pap and HPV, q5, age 18 | 50,790 | 500 |
| Pap and HPV, q3, age 25 | 54,835 | 335 |
| HPV only, q3, age 18 | 60,456 | 330 |
| Miller at age 18, then HPV only, q5, age 25 | 61,375 | 517 |
| Miller at age 18, then Pap and HPV, q5, age 25 | 73,470 | 481 |
| Pap and HPV, q3, age 18 | 76,438 | 304 |
| Miller at age 18, then HPV only, q3, age 25 | 79,887 | 301 |
| Pap and HPV, q2, age 25 | 82,340 | 229 |
| Miller at age 18, then Pap and HPV, q3, age 25 | 97,645 | 283 |
| Miller at age 18, then Pap and HPV, q2, age 252 | 125,229 | 184 |
1 Strategy falls on the efficiency frontier (for Ontario)
Figure 2Efficiency curves for Canada and the province of Alberta.
Figure 3Efficiency curves for the provinces of Ontario and Newfoundland.
Figure 4Acceptability curves for strategies identified as cost effective (for Ontario - results for other provinces and Canada are similar).