Literature DB >> 27168261

Economic Costs Avoided by Diagnosing Melanoma Six Months Earlier Justify >100 Benign Biopsies.

Daniel J Aires, Jo Wick, Tarek S Shaath, Anand N Rajpara, Vikas Patel, Ahmed H Badawi, Cicy Li, Garth R Fraga, Gary Doolittle, Deede Y Liu.   

Abstract

New melanoma drugs bring enormous benefits but do so at significant costs. Because melanoma grows deeper and deadlier over time, deeper lesions are costlier due to increased sentinel lymph node biopsy, chemotherapy, and disease-associated income loss. Prior studies have justified pigmented lesion biopsies on a "value per life" basis; by contrast we sought to assess how many biopsies are justified per melanoma found on a purely economic basis. We modeled how melanomas in the United States would behave if diagnosis were delayed by 6 months, eg, not biopsied, only observed until the next surveillance visit. Economic loss from delayed biopsy is the obverse of economic benefit of performing biopsy earlier. Growth rates were based on Liu et al. The results of this study can be applied to all patients presenting to dermatologists with pigmented skin lesions suspicious for melanoma. In-situ melanomas were excluded because no studies to date have modeled growth rates analogous to those for invasive melanoma. We assume conservatively that all melanomas not biopsied initially will be biopsied and treated 6 months later. Major modeled costs are (1) increased sentinel lymph node biopsy, (2) increased chemotherapy for metastatic lesions using increased 5-yr death as metastasis marker, and (3) income loss per melanoma death at $413,370 as previously published. Costs avoided by diagnosing melanoma earlier justify 170 biopsies per melanoma found. Efforts to penalize "unnecessary" biopsies may be economically counterproductive. <br /><br /> <em>J Drugs Dermatol. </em>2016;15(5):527-532.

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Year:  2016        PMID: 27168261

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Drugs Dermatol        ISSN: 1545-9616            Impact factor:   2.114


  3 in total

1.  Number needed to biopsy ratio and diagnostic accuracy for melanoma detection.

Authors:  Michael A Marchetti; Ashley Yu; Japbani Nanda; Philipp Tschandl; Harald Kittler; Ashfaq A Marghoob; Allan C Halpern; Stephen W Dusza
Journal:  J Am Acad Dermatol       Date:  2020-04-29       Impact factor: 11.527

2.  Meta-analysis of number needed to treat for diagnosis of melanoma by clinical setting.

Authors:  Amy J Petty; Bradley Ackerson; Reed Garza; Michael Peterson; Beiyu Liu; Cynthia Green; Michelle Pavlis
Journal:  J Am Acad Dermatol       Date:  2020-01-11       Impact factor: 11.527

3.  Proportion of Thick versus Thin Melanomas as a Benchmarking Tool.

Authors:  Calogero Pagliarello; Serena Magi; Laura Mazzoni; Ignazio Stanganelli
Journal:  J Clin Med       Date:  2021-11-26       Impact factor: 4.241

  3 in total

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