| Literature DB >> 24682722 |
Abstract
BACKGROUND: A campaign to increase the awareness of the signs and symptoms of colorectal cancer (CRC) and encourage self-presentation to a GP was piloted in two regions of England in 2011. Short-term data from the pilot evaluation on campaign cost and changes in GP attendances/referrals, CRC incidence, and CRC screening uptake were available. The objective was to estimate the effectiveness and cost-effectiveness of a CRC awareness campaign by using a mathematical model which extrapolates short-term outcomes to predict long-term impacts on cancer mortality, quality-adjusted life-years (QALYs), and costs.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2014 PMID: 24682722 PMCID: PMC4018507 DOI: 10.1007/s10552-014-0366-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cancer Causes Control ISSN: 0957-5243 Impact factor: 2.506
Fig. 1Potential effects of an early awareness campaign for colorectal cancer (CRC)
Fig. 2Pilot bowel cancer awareness campaign, key facts
Summary of data from the pilot campaign used in the modeling
| Data observed from pilot campaign | Base case assumption in model | Scenario analyses | |
|---|---|---|---|
| GP attendances | 700 increase over 3-month period (532 increase if diarrhea included as a symptom) Equivalent to 60,000–80,000 nationally. | 70,000 more attendances nationally over 3-month period Assumed 50 % “additional” & 50 % “earlier” | Assumed 90 % “additional” & 10 % “earlier” |
| GP referrals | 1956 increase in referrals over 5-month period (+28 %) | 17,519 additional referrals nationally Assumed 50 % “additional”& 50 % “earlier” | Assumed 90 % “additional” & 10 % “earlier” |
| CRC incidence | 7–11 % increase in incidence for 1 month | 10 % increase in presentation rates for 1 month | 5–20 % magnitude 1 to 6-month duration |
| CRC incidence stage distribution | Numbers too small to draw any conclusions | Campaign assumed to have the same proportional effect on presentation rates for each CRC stage. | Short-term increase in incidence only consists of Dukes’ stages C & D |
| CRC screening uptake | No significant change which could be attributed to the campaign | Assume screening uptake unaffected by campaign | Exploratory analysis undertaken |
| Cost of running campaign | £5 million | £5 million | – |
Fig. 3Colorectal cancer incidence in the East of England and southwest regions combined (data extract October 2012)
Model parameters associated with the awareness campaign
| Awareness campaign parameters | Mean | Source |
|---|---|---|
| Increased presentation rates stage A | 10 % | Pilot campaign data [ |
| Increased presentation rates stage B | 10 % | Pilot campaign data [ |
| Increased presentation rates stage C | 10 % | Pilot campaign data [ |
| Increased presentation rates stage D | 10 % | Pilot campaign data [ |
| Duration of increase in presentation rates (months) | 1 | Pilot campaign data [ |
| Increased screening uptake rate | 0 | NHS cancer screening 2012 |
| Cost of campaign per person | £0.14 | Department of Health 2012 |
| Cost of GP visit (12 min consultation) | £36 | Curtis 2010 |
| Average cost of secondary care attendance for suspected lower GI cancer | £200 | Costs from NHS reference costs 2011, probabilities from Tappenden [ |
| Additional GP attendances per person | 0.0014 | Pilot campaign data [ |
| Additional secondary care appointments per person | 1.52606E−05 | Pilot campaign data [ |
| Proportion of additional visits which are extra | 0.5 | Assumption |
| Cost of additional GP and secondary care attendances | £0.026 | Calculated from other parameters |
Parameters associated with CRC natural history and screening model
| Mean | Source | |
|---|---|---|
| Screening participation and harm parameters | ||
| FOBT participation for each screening round | 0.54 | NHS BCSP data [ |
| Proportion completing at least one FOBT screening round | 0.63 | NHS BCSP data [ |
| FOBT participation for a round for those who comply with at least one FOBT | 0.85 | Calculated from above parameters |
| COL follow-up compliance FOBT screening | 0.79 | NHS BCSP data [ |
| COL surveillance compliance | 0.83 | NHS BCSP data [ |
| COL (without polypectomy) perforation rate | 0.0 % | FS UK screening trial data [ |
| COL (with polypectomy) perforation rate | 0.3 % | Bowel cancer screening pilot 2nd round evaluation [ |
| COL Probability of death following perforation | 5.2 % | Gatto et al. [ |
| COL probability of hospitalization for bleeding | 0.3 % | FS UK screening trial data [ |
| Health-related quality of life parameters | ||
| Utility value cancer free | 0.80 | Ara et al. [ |
| Utility value CRC | 0.70 | Ara et al. [ |
| Resource use parameters | ||
| gFOBT mean number of tests completed | 1.08 | Assumption details in [ |
| COL repeat test rate | 0.07 | NHS BCSP data [ |
| Cost of gFOBT screen (non-compliers) | £2.03 | Southern Hub screening costings model [ |
| Cost of gFOBT screen (normal result) | £3.36 | Southern Hub screening costings model [ |
| Cost of gFOBT screen (positive result) | £11.94 | Southern Hub screening costings model [ |
| Cost of COL (without polypectomy) | £563 | NHS ref costs, screening centre estimates [ |
| Cost of COL (with polypectomy) | £563 | NHS ref costs, screening centre estimates [ |
| Cost of treating bowel perforation (major surgery) | £5,089 | NHS reference costs [ |
| Cost of admittance for bleeding (overnight stay on medical ward) | £278 | NHS reference costs [ |
| Pathology cost for adenoma/cancer | £26 | NHS reference costs 08/09, histopathology [ |
| Cost of treating colorectal cancer, Dukes’ stage A | £1,320–£8,375 | Ranges presented reflect variation according to age at diagnosis. Generated using model from Tappenden [ |
| Cost of treating colorectal cancer, Dukes’ stage B | £1,479–£8,362 | |
| Cost of treating colorectal cancer, Dukes’ stage C | £1,493–£13,862 | |
| Cost of treating colorectal cancer, Dukes’ stage D | £772–£11,198 | |
| Test characteristics | ||
| gFOBT sensitivity for LR adenomas | 0.01 | Model calibration [ |
| gFOBT sensitivity for HR adenomas | 0.12 | Model calibration [ |
| gFOBT sensitivity for CRC | 0.24 | Model calibration [ |
| gFOBT specificity age 50 | 0.99 | Model calibration [ |
| gFOBT specificity age 70 | 0.97 | Model calibration [ |
| COL sensitivity for LR adenomas | 0.77 | Van Rijn et al. [ |
| COL sensitivity for HR adenomas | 0.98 | Van Rijn et al. [ |
| COL sensitivity for CRC | 0.98 | Bressler et al. [ |
| COL specificity | 1.00 | Assumption due to nature of the test |
| Natural history parameters | ||
| Normal epithelium to LR adenomas–age 30 | 0.021 | Model calibration [ |
| Normal epithelium to LR adenomas–age 50 | 0.020 | Model calibration [ |
| Normal epithelium to LR adenomas–age 70 | 0.045 | Model calibration [ |
| Normal epithelium to LR adenomas–age 100 | 0.011 | Model calibration [ |
| LR adenomas to high-risk adenomas–age 30 | 0.009 | Model calibration [ |
| LR adenomas to high-risk adenomas–age 50 | 0.008 | Model calibration [ |
| LR adenomas to high-risk adenomas–age 70 | 0.008 | Model calibration [ |
| LR adenomas to high-risk adenomas–age 100 | 0.004 | Model calibration [ |
| HR adenomas to Dukes’ A CRC–age 30 | 0.029 | Model calibration [ |
| HR adenomas to Dukes’ A CRC–age 50 | 0.025 | Model calibration [ |
| HR adenomas to Dukes’ A CRC–age 70 | 0.054 | Model calibration [ |
| HR adenomas to Dukes’ A CRC–age 100 | 0.115 | Model calibration [ |
| Normal epithelium to CRC Dukes’ A | 0.00004 | Model calibration [ |
| Preclinical CRC: Dukes’ Stage A to B | 0.51 | Model calibration [ |
| Preclinical CRC: Dukes’ Stage B to C | 0.69 | Model calibration [ |
| Preclinical CRC: Dukes’ Stage C to D | 0.71 | Model calibration [ |
| Symptomatic presentation with CRC Dukes’ A | 0.04 | Model calibration [ |
| Symptomatic presentation with CRC Dukes’ B | 0.18 | Model calibration [ |
| Symptomatic presentation with CRC Dukes’ C | 0.37 | Model calibration [ |
| Symptomatic presentation with CRC Dukes’ D | 0.74 | Model calibration [ |
| Proportion of cancer incidence classified as proximal | 0.38 | Cancer Registrations 2007, England [ |
| Average number of adenomas present in patient with at least one adenoma | 1.90 | Winawer et al. [ |
| Proportion of advanced adenomas classified as HR adenomas | 0.75 | FS UK screening trial data [ |
Fig. 4Natural History model diagram
Model predictions for a CRC awareness campaign resulting in a 10 % increase in presentation rates for a period of 1 month
| Model predictions for the current population of England evaluated over a lifetime: Change compared to “No awareness campaign” | ||
|---|---|---|
| Outcome | Mean (from deterministic analysis) | 95 percentiles from probabilistic sensitivity analysis* |
| CRC incidence–symptomatic presentation Dukes’ Stage A | 26 | (26, 28) |
| B | 52 | (49, 53) |
| C | 33 | (25, 38) |
| D | −92 | (−96, −79) |
| CRC incidence–symptomatic presentation TOTAL | 20 | (19, 24) |
| CRC incidence screen/surveillance detected Dukes’ Stage A | −0 | (0, 0) |
| B | −1 | (−2, −1) |
| C | −2 | (−3, −2) |
| D | −2 | (−3, −1) |
| CRC incidence–screening/surveillance detected TOTAL | −5 | (−7, −5) |
| CRC-specific deaths | −66 | (−69, −56) |
| Deaths with undiagnosed CRC | −14 | (−17, −14) |
| Total costs related to screening (discounted) | −£3,407 | (−4,498, −2,855) |
| Cancer management (inc. pathology) costs (discounted) | £94,443 | (88,853, 116,287) |
| Cost of additional GP consultations/referrals (discounted) | £855,716 | (855,716, 855,716) |
| Cost of awareness campaign (discounted) | £4,499,995 | (4,499,995, 4,499,995) |
| Total cost (discounted) | £5,446,745 | (5,441,070, 5,468,342) |
| Total life-years gained (undiscounted) | 991 | (833, 1,041) |
| Total life-years gained (discounted) | 622 | (516, 657) |
| Total QALYs gained (discounted) | 404 | (322, 439) |
| ICER | £13,496 | (12,407, 16,893) |
| NMB | £2,624,770 | (1,001,887, 3,330,998 |
Sensitivity analyses to explore uncertainty in the increase in presentation rates caused by the campaign: varying the duration, magnitude, and stage distribution
| CRC deaths prevented | QALY gain | ICER | ||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Magntiude of change in symptomatic presentation rate (% increase) | ||||||||||
| 5 % | 10 % | 20 % | 5 % | 10 % | 20 % | 5 % | 10 % | 20 % | ||
| Campaign causes increase in symptomatic presentation rate for all stages of colorectal cancer | ||||||||||
| Duration of change in symptomatic presentation rate (months) | 1 | 33 | 66 | 131 | 202 | 404 | 807 | £26,767 | £13,496 | £6,861 |
| 3 | 101 | 202 | 403 | 622 | 1,243 | 2,487 | £8,843 | £4,536 | £2,383 | |
| 6 | 210 | 419 | 838 | 1,296 | 2,592 | 5,183 | £4,368 | £2,301 | £1,268 | |
| Campaign causes increase in symptomatic presentation rate for Dukes’ stages C and D colorectal cancer | ||||||||||
| 1 | 14 | 28 | 57 | 98 | 196 | 391 | £55,210 | £27,826 | £14,135 | |
| 3 | 44 | 89 | 177 | 306 | 611 | 1,223 | £17,965 | £9,205 | £4,825 | |
| 6 | 94 | 189 | 378 | 651 | 1,302 | 2,605 | £8,672 | £4,560 | £2,504 | |
Fig. 5Two-way sensitivity analyses to explore uncertainty in the increase in presentation rates caused by the campaign: varying the duration and magnitude
Fig. 6GP attendances associated with CRC symptoms
Fig. 7Referrals from primary care for suspected lower GI cancer