| Literature DB >> 22805324 |
E M Wever1, J Hugosson, E A M Heijnsdijk, C H Bangma, G Draisma, H J de Koning.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Screening with prostate-specific antigen (PSA) can reduce prostate cancer mortality, but may advance diagnosis and treatment in time and lead to overdetection and overtreatment. We estimated benefits and adverse effects of PSA screening for individuals who are deciding whether or not to be screened.Entities:
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Year: 2012 PMID: 22805324 PMCID: PMC3425982 DOI: 10.1038/bjc.2012.317
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Br J Cancer ISSN: 0007-0920 Impact factor: 7.640
Figure 1Harms and benefits in prostate cancer screening. Time 0 is the time of deciding to participate or not in screening. Utility or quality of life has value 1 until the moment of a prostate cancer diagnosis (Dx); the remaining lifetime until death (Dth) has utility u<1. The figure shows hypothetical utility curves for a person without (solid) and with screening (dashes). Screening may detect prostate cancer earlier (at time (Dx’) and possibly postpone the moment of death (to time Dth’). Area I represents the gain in quality-adjusted life-years and area II the loss in quality of life due to earlier detection. The level u depends on the consequences of diagnosis and treatment. If the expected gain in quality-adjusted life-years (area I) equals the expected loss of quality of life due to earlier diagnosis (area II), the decision to participate in screening or not does not affect expected quality-adjusted life-years. The utility break-even point is the utility level corresponding to that situation.
Predicted results of prostate cancer (pc) diagnosis and death
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| No screening | 14.44 | 0.00 | 2.98 | 25.44 | 1.28 | 26.72 | − |
| Annual screening | 21.38 | 17.62 | 1.91 | 23.81 | 2.99 | 26.81 | 0.947 |
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| No screening | 14.44 | 0.00 | 2.94 | 21.08 | 1.24 | 22.31 | − |
| Annual screening | 21.54 | 17.73 | 1.89 | 19.47 | 2.93 | 22.40 | 0.949 |
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| No screening | 14.07 | 0.00 | 2.86 | 17.07 | 1.11 | 18.18 | − |
| Annual screening | 21.38 | 17.51 | 1.88 | 15.55 | 2.71 | 18.26 | 0.954 |
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| No screening | 13.35 | 0.00 | 2.64 | 13.50 | 0.93 | 14.43 | − |
| Annual screening | 20.90 | 16.79 | 1.81 | 12.15 | 2.34 | 14.49 | 0.960 |
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| No screening | 14.10 | 0.00 | 2.86 | 19.55 | 1.15 | 20.70 | |
| Annual screening | 21.31 | 17.43 | 1.87 | 18.02 | 2.76 | 20.78 | 0.952 |
Expected life-years till the time of prostate cancer diagnosis.
The utility break-even point is the value of the utility of living with diagnosed prostate cancer for which the utility-adjusted life expectancy does not change upon deciding to participate in screening or not. Its value decreases with larger gains in overall life expectancy relative to the expected loss in pre-diagnosis life-years. A high value of the utility break-even point means that men should only decide in favour of screening when they anticipate a small loss in quality of life owing to detection and possibly treatment of prostate cancer.
Percentage of population experiencing benefits and harms of prostate cancer (pc) screening
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| Never diagnosed with pc whether being screened or not | 78.46 | 0.00 | 0.00 |
| Diagnosed with pc if being screened, but never diagnosed with pc if not being screened | 7.10 | 10.69 | 0.00 |
| Diagnosed with pc and dead from other causes whether being screened or not | 11.50 | 5.43 | 0.00 |
| Diagnosed with pc and dead from pc whether being screened or not | 1.89 | 6.97 | 0.00 |
| Diagnosed with pc whether being screened or not, but not dead from pc because of early detection by screening | 1.05 | 9.15 | 8.57 |
| Weighted total | 100.00 | 1.61 | 0.09 |
Figure 2Survival curves with follow-up time from the time of decision. These stacked figures show the proportion of men who are alive without diagnosed prostate cancer (white area), alive with diagnosed prostate cancer (light grey area), dead from prostate cancer (dark grey area) and dead from other causes (black area) at various points in time.
Sensitivity analysis for uncertainty in the model and the dataa
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| 8.02 | Rotterdam | 1 | 0.42 and 0.22 | No screening | 14.44 | 2.94 | 21.08 | 1.24 | 22.31 | − |
| Annual screening | 21.54 | 1.89 | 19.47 | 2.93 | 22.40 | 0.949 | ||||
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| 8.50 | Rotterdam | 1 | 0.42 and 0.22 | No screening | 13.14 | 2.68 | 21.22 | 1.11 | 22.34 | − |
| Annual screening | 21.47 | 1.73 | 19.45 | 2.97 | 22.41 | 0.959 | ||||
| 7.12 | Rotterdam | 1 | 0.42 and 0.22 | No screening | 15.39 | 3.03 | 20.95 | 1.35 | 22.30 | − |
| Annual screening | 21.21 | 1.95 | 19.55 | 2.84 | 22.39 | 0.939 | ||||
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| 8.02 | Göteborg | 1 | 0.42 and 0.22 | No screening | 20.70 | 4.23 | 20.44 | 1.77 | 22.21 | − |
| Annual screening | 30.87 | 2.72 | 18.13 | 4.20 | 22.34 | 0.949 | ||||
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| 8.02 | Rotterdam | 0.5 | 0.42 and 0.22 | No screening | 14.44 | 1.78 | 21.08 | 1.33 | 22.41 | − |
| Annual screening | 21.54 | 1.14 | 19.47 | 2.99 | 22.46 | 0.969 | ||||
| 8.02 | Rotterdam | 2 | 0.42 and 0.22 | No screening | 14.44 | 4.48 | 21.08 | 1.11 | 22.19 | − |
| Annual screening | 21.54 | 2.91 | 19.47 | 2.85 | 22.32 | 0.924 | ||||
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| 8.02 | Rotterdam | 1 | 0.67 and 0.35 | No screening | 14.44 | 2.94 | 21.08 | 1.24 | 22.31 | − |
| Annual screening | 21.54 | 2.56 | 19.47 | 2.88 | 22.35 | 0.981 | ||||
| 8.02 | Rotterdam | 1 | 0.86 and 0.44 | No screening | 14.44 | 2.94 | 21.08 | 1.24 | 22.31 | − |
| Annual screening | 21.54 | 0.82 | 19.47 | 3.02 | 22.49 | 0.902 | ||||
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| 8.50 | Rotterdam | 0.5 | 0.42 and 0.22 | No screening | 13.14 | 1.62 | 21.22 | 1.20 | 22.42 | − |
| Annual screening | 21.47 | 1.41 | 19.45 | 2.99 | 22.44 | 0.991 | ||||
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| 7.12 | Göteborg | 2 | 0.86 and 0.44 | No screening | 21.84 | 6.62 | 20.29 | 1.72 | 22.01 | − |
| Annual screening | 30.10 | 1.97 | 18.30 | 4.11 | 22.41 | 0.833 | ||||
Results are presented for men who were first screened at age 55–59.
We used penalised optimisation to obtain a range of models with different lead-times (Draisma ).
We varied the incidence in the model by using the estimated incidence parameters that reproduced the incidence in the Netherlands or Sweden.
A relative risk of 0.5 on the hazard of prostate cancer death increases prostate cancer-specific survival and a relative risk of 2 on the hazard of prostate cancer death decreases prostate cancer-specific survival.
The cure rates show the proportion of screen-detected men who do not die of pc because their cancer is diagnosed and treated earlier. The cure rates were obtained by calibrating the ERSPC-Rotterdam model to a 10, 27 or 56% mortality reduction. The first cure rates are for men screen-detected for pc with the Gleason score ⩽7 and the second cure rates are for men screen-detected for pc with the Gleason score >7.
The utility break-even point is the value of the utility of living with diagnosed prostate cancer for which the utility-adjusted life expectancy does not change upon deciding to participate in screening or not. Its value decreases with larger gains in overall life expectancy relative to the expected loss in prostate-cancer-free life expectancy. A high value of the utility break-even point means that men should only decide in favour of screening when they anticipate a small loss in quality of life owing to detection and possibly treatment of prostate cancer.