| Literature DB >> 21170578 |
Yvonne N Flores1, David M Bishai, Attila Lorincz, Keerti V Shah, Eduardo Lazcano-Ponce, Mauricio Hernández, Víctor Granados-García, Ruth Pérez, Jorge Salmerón.
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: To determine the incremental costs and effects of different HPV testing strategies, when compared to Papanicolau cytology (Pap), for cervical cancer screening in Mexico.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2010 PMID: 21170578 PMCID: PMC3025113 DOI: 10.1007/s10552-010-9694-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cancer Causes Control ISSN: 0957-5243 Impact factor: 2.506
Parameters values of the model
| Parameter | Base case Estimate | Range | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Min | Max | ||
| Test performance (Sensitivity)a | |||
| Women 20–80 | |||
| Cervical cytology (Pap test) | 59.4 | 49.2 | 68.9 |
| Self-HPV test | 71.3 | 61.3 | 79.6 |
| Clinician HPV test | 93.1 | 85.8 | 96.9 |
| Clinician HPV test + Pap test | 98.0 | 92.3 | 99.7 |
| Women 30–80 | |||
| Cervical cytology (Pap test) | 62.9 | 52.0 | 72.7 |
| Self-HPV test | 68.5 | 57.7 | 77.8 |
| Clinician HPV test | 92.1 | 83.9 | 96.5 |
| Clinician HPV test + Pap test | 97.8 | 91.4 | 99.6 |
| Test performance (Specificity)a | |||
| Women 20–80 | |||
| Cervical cytology (Pap test) | 98.3 | 98.0 | 98.6 |
| Self-HPV test | 89.2 | 88.5 | 89.9 |
| Clinician HPV test | 91.8 | 91.2 | 92.4 |
| Clinician HPV test + Pap test | 91.1 | 90.5 | 91.8 |
| Women 30–80 | |||
| Cervical cytology (Pap test) | 98.2 | 97.8 | 98.5 |
| Self-HPV test | 89.6 | 88.8 | 90.3 |
| Clinician HPV test | 92.2 | 91.5 | 92.9 |
| Clinician HPV test + Pap test | 91.4 | 90.7 | 92.1 |
| Screening and treatment costs (in 2008 USD) | |||
| Self-HPV testing cost results | 14.15 | 10.61 | 17.69b |
| Clinician-HPV testing cost results | 20.06 | 15.05 | 25.08b |
| Clinician-HPV testing + Pap testing cost results | 26.18 | 19.64 | 32.73b |
| Pap testing cost results | 13.20 | 9.90 | 16.50c |
| Total cost colposcopy without a biopsy | 37.41 | 28.06 | 46.76c |
| Total cost colposcopy with a biopsy | 64.86 | 48.65 | 81.08c |
| Total cost pathology | 24.69 | 18.52 | 30.86c |
| Average cost CIN 2/3 treatment | 1,610 | 1,207 | 2,012d |
| Average cost cervical cancer treatment | 8,421 | 7,806 | 8,637d |
| Prevalence CIN 2/3/cervical cancer | 0.013 | 0.0098 | 0.0163a |
HVP: human papillomavirus; CIN: cervical intraepithelial neoplasia
a Sensitivity and specificity estimates and 95% CIs from Salmeron (2002)
b Yvonne Flores, unpublished data
c Ruth Pérez, unpublished data
d Insinga [33]
Fig. 1Screening strategy decision tree
Total cost of screening women aged 20–80 and 30–80 for each strategy
| No Screening | Pap | Self-HPV | C-HPV | Pap and C-HPV | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Women 20–80 ( | |||||
| True positives | 0 | 78 | 93 | 122 | 128 |
| True negatives | 0 | 9,701 | 8,803 | 9,060 | 8,991 |
| False positives | 0 | 168 | 1,066 | 809 | 878 |
| False negatives | 131 | 53 | 38 | 9 | 3 |
| Cost of screening test | $0.00 | $13.20 | $14.15 | $20.06 | $26.18 |
| Cost of true positives | $0.00 | $133,594.50 | $159,374.10 | $209,792.42 | $220,893.44 |
| Cost of true negatives | $0.00 | $128,053.20 | $124,562.45 | $181,743.60 | $235,384.38 |
| Cost of false positives | $0.00 | $13,206.30 | $67,188.02 | $57,074.83 | $67,587.82 |
| Cost of false negatives | $1,103,151.00 | $447,012.60 | $320,535.70 | $75,969.54 | $25,341.54 |
| Total program cost | $1,103,151.00 | $721,866.60 | $671,660.27 | $524,580.39 | $549,207.18 |
| Total cost per woman | $110.32 | $72.19 | $67.17 | $52.46 | $54.92 |
| Women 30–80 ( | |||||
| True positives | 0 | 82 | 90 | 121 | 128 |
| True negatives | 0 | 6,431 | 5,868 | 6,038 | 5,986 |
| False positives | 0 | 118 | 681 | 511 | 563 |
| False negatives | 131 | 49 | 41 | 10 | 3 |
| Cost of screening test | $0.00 | $13.20 | $14.15 | $20.06 | $26.18 |
| Cost of true positives | $0.00 | $140,445.50 | $154,233.00 | $208,072.81 | $220,893.44 |
| Cost of true negatives | $0.00 | $84,889.20 | $83,032.20 | $121,122.28 | $156,713.48 |
| Cost of false positives | $0.00 | $9,164.91 | $42,757.29 | $36,074.75 | $43,415.47 |
| Cost of false negatives | $1,103,151.00 | $413,275.80 | $345,841.15 | $84,410.60 | $25,341.54 |
| Total program cost | $1,103,151.00 | $647,775.41 | $625,863.64 | $449,680.44 | $446,363.93 |
| Total cost per woman | $165.14 | $96.97 | $93.69 | $67.32 | $66.82 |
HPV: human papillomavirus, C-HPV: Clinician HPV test
Costs reported in 2008 US dollars
Incremental cost-effectiveness of ten cervical cancer screening strategies
| Screening strategy | (A) Program costs | (B) Cost of missed CC cases | (C) Total cost | (D) Incremental cost | (E) Total cases detected | (F) Incremental cases detected | (G) Incremental Cost/Effectivenes Ratio (ICER) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Pap and Clinician-HPV test (30–80 y) | $421,022 | $25,342 | $446,364 | – | 128 | – | |
| Clinician-HPV test (30–80 y) | $365,270 | $84,411 | $449,681 | $3,317 | 121 | – | Dominateda |
| Clinician-HPV test (20–80 y) | $448,611 | $75,970 | $524,581 | $78,217 | 122 | – | Dominateda |
| Pap and clinician-HPV test (20–80 y) | $523,865 | $25,342 | $549,207 | $102,843 | 128 | – | Dominateda |
| Self-HPV test (30–80 y) | $280,023 | $345,841 | $625,864 | $179,500 | 90 | – | Dominateda |
| Pap test (30–80 y) | $234,499 | $413,276 | $647,775 | $201,411 | 82 | – | Dominateda |
| Self-HPV test (20–80 y) | $351,125 | $320,536 | $671,661 | $225,297 | 93 | – | Dominateda |
| Pap test (20–80 y) | $274,854 | $447,013 | $721,867 | $275,503 | 78 | – | Dominateda |
| No screening (20–80 y) | $0 | $1,103,151 | $1,103,151 | $656,787 | 0 | – | Dominateda |
| No screening (30–80 y) | $0 | $1,103,151 | $1,103,151 | $653,470 | 0 | – | Dominateda |
Assessed for base-case: prevalence of CIN 2/3 and cervical cancer (CC) was 1.3%. All costs are in 2008 US dollars
(A) Program costs include fixed and variable costs associated with the cost of baseline screening test and follow-up confirmatory tests such as colposcopy and histology
(B) The estimated cost of subsequent treatment for an undetected case of CC is $8,421 US dollars; the cost of lost CC cases = Number of undetected CC cases (131 − (D)) × $8,421
(C) Total program costs = Program costs (A) + Cost of missed CC cases (false negatives) (B). (See Table 1)
(D) The incremental cost is the difference in cost between each strategy and the next best undominated strategy
(E) Number of CIN 2/3 and CC cases detected by the specified screening strategy
(F) The difference in the number of cases detected by each of the three undominated screening strategies
(G) Incremental cost/effectiveness ratio = Incremental cost/incremental CIN 2/3 and CC cases detected
a A dominated strategy costs more and is less effective than the undominated strategies
Fig. 2Cost-effectiveness of 10 cervical cancer screening strategies*
* Note: The points along the lines represent non-dominated strategies that are cost-effective. The points below the lines represent dominated strategies that are not cost-effective
One-way sensitivity analysis results
| Test | Varying sensitivity of tests | Varying costs of tests | Varying costs of treatment (CIN2/3 and CC) | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Base case | Low estimate | High estimate | Low estimate | High estimate | Low estimate | High estimate | |
| Pap 20–80 | 9,277 | 12,613 +36% | 7,085 −24% | 8,827 −5% | 9,775 +5% | 8,470 −9% | 9,843 +6% |
| Pap 30–80 | 7,861 | 10,879 +38% | 5,868 −25% | 7,516 −4% | 8,142 +4% | 7,063 −10% | 8,358 +6% |
| Self-HPV 20–80 | 7,191 | 9,427 +31% | 5,714 −21% | 6,621 −8% | 7,703 +7% | 6,511 −9% | 7,651 +6% |
| Self-HPV 30–80 | 6,975 | 9,562 +37% | 5,355 −23% | 6,616 −5% | 7,373 +6% | 6,309 −10% | 7,496 +7% |
| Clin-HPV 20–80 | 4,301 | 5,241 +22% | 3,871 −10% | 3,786 −12% | 4,821 +12% | 3,855 −10% | 4,721 +10% |
| Clin-HPV 30–80 | 3,727 | 4,770 +28% | 3,269 −12% | 3,393 −9% | 4,100 +10% | 3,291 −12% | 4,167 +12% |
| Pap & Clin-HPV 20-80 | 4,278 | 4,938 +15% | 4,071 −5% | 3,640 −15% | 4,878 +14% | 3,843 −10% | 4,278 +9% |
| Pap & Clin-HPV 30-80 | 3,484 | 4,192 +20% | 3,293 −5% | 3,059 −12% | 3,898 +12% | 3,061 −12% | 3,885 +12% |
Cost-effectiveness ratios (cost per case prevented of CIN2/3 or cancer)
In US dollars of 2008 year. (Base case scenario is the total costs divided by cases detected)