| Literature DB >> 27197711 |
Prabhu P Gounder1, Lisa R Bulkow2, Martin I Meltzer3, Michael G Bruce2, Thomas W Hennessy2, Mary Snowball4, Philip R Spradling5, Bishwa B Adhikari3, Brian J McMahon2,4.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The American Association for the Study of Liver Diseases (AASLD) recommends semi-annual hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) screening using ultrasound (US) in persons with chronic hepatitis B (CHB) virus infection at high risk for HCC such as Asian males aged ≥40 years and Asian females aged ≥50 years.Entities:
Keywords: Alaska Native people; clinical outcome; diagnosis; early detection of cancer; economics
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27197711 PMCID: PMC4873562 DOI: 10.3402/ijch.v75.31115
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Circumpolar Health ISSN: 1239-9736 Impact factor: 1.228
Demographic and clinical characteristics of the cohort participants with history of hepatitis B virus (HBV) infection and those who developed hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) – Alaska, 1983–2012.a
| Participants with HBV | Participants with HCC | |
|---|---|---|
| Characteristics | N=839 | N=21 |
| Ethnic Group | ||
| Eskimo | 656 (78%) | 21 (100%) |
| Aleut | 87 (10%) | 0 |
| Indian | 96 (11%) | 0 |
| Urban residence | 211 (25%) | 5 (24%) |
| Patients alive | 553 (66%) | 3 (14%) |
| Mean (median) age of patients alive | 56 (55) years | 66 (73) years |
| Mean (median) person-years of follow-up | 12 (11) years | 10 (9) years |
| Mean (median) age at HCC diagnosis | – | 61 (61) years |
| HBV Genotype | ||
| A | 105 (13%) | 2 (10%) |
| B | 44 (5%) | 0 |
| C | 54 (6%) | 9 (43%) |
| D | 387 (46%) | 5 (24%) |
| F | 117 (14%) | 5 (24%) |
| H | 1 (0.1%) | 0 |
| Unknown | 131 (16%) | 0 |
| Cirrhosis present at HCC diagnosis | Unknown | 8 (38%) |
Analysis restricted to males aged >40 years and females aged >50 years.
Includes patients with HBV infection who subsequently cleared hepatitis B surface antigen.
As of 12/31/2012.
Biopsy confirmed.
Epidemiologic data for a cost analysis from a prospectively followed cohort of AN persons with chronic hepatitis B virus infection, 1983–2012
| Epidemiologic input | Data |
|---|---|
| Number of cohort participants | 839 |
| Males (%) | 564 (67%) |
| Number of cohort participants with HCC (%) | 21 (2.5%) |
| Early-stage tumour | 10 |
| Median (mean) years survival by tumour stage | |
| Early stage | 3.1 (5.0) |
| Late stage | 0.2 (0.8) |
| Total number of potential screening opportunities | 21,226 |
| Total number of AFP measurements in cohort | 10,931 |
| Median AFP measurements/person | 11 |
| % of total potential screening opportunities | 51% |
AFP, alpha-fetoprotein; HCC, hepatocellular carcinoma; US, ultrasound.
Comprises males attaining age ≥40 years and females attaining age ≥50 years during January 1, 1983 to December 31, 2012.
Single tumour ≤5 cm in diameter or ≤3 tumours ≤3 cm in diameter.
Assumes persons received screening for HCC every 6 months.
Assumes persons received screening for HCC on dates for which an AFP measurement was documented (excluding AFP measurements occurring <4 months after a prior measurement).
Base-case model assumptions for estimating the costs for hepatocellular carcinoma screening
| Model input | Assumption |
|---|---|
| Number of screening tests performed by AFP→US | 10,931 |
| Number of AFP measurements | 9,378 |
| Number of US screenings | 1,553 |
| Number of ultrasounds performed by US-alone method | 10,931 |
| Tumours detected at an early stage by AFP→US method | 10 |
| Tumours detected at an early stage by US-alone method according to size | 14 |
| Direct costs per test | |
| (Medicare reimbursement rates in 2012) | |
| AFP | $109.94 |
| US | $26.76 |
| Roundtrip cost/patient to an US-equipped facility | $200 |
| % cohort members requiring transportation to US facility | 60% |
AFP, alpha-fetoprotein; HCC, hepatocellular carcinoma; US, ultrasound.
Assumes patients received screening for HCC by serum AFP measurements initially and switched to ultrasound for all subsequent screenings if AFP >10 ng/mL.
Assumes patients received screening for HCC by ultrasound on dates for which AFP measurements are recorded.
Single tumour ≤5 cm in diameter or ≤3 tumours ≤3 cm in diameter.
Assumes 33% (4) of tumours identified at a late stage by the AFP→US method were identified by the US-alone method at an early stage.
For patients living in rural Alaska areas without ready access to US.
Comparing the costs of 2 hypothetical screening scenarios for hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) – Alaska, 1983–2012a
| Costs/benefits without transportation expenses | Costs/benefits with transportation expenses | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| AFP→US | US-alone | AFP→US | US-alone | |
| Analysis without discounting | ||||
| Total cost for cohort (Base Year 2012) | $528,000 | $1,203,000 | $868,000 | $2,517,000 |
| No. of early-tumours detected | 10 | 14 | 10 | 14 |
| Median (mean) YLG for Cohort | 29.6 (42) | 41.4 (58.8) | 29.6 (42) | 41.4 (58.8) |
| Cost/early-stage tumour detected | $53,000 | $86,000 | $87,000 | $180,000 |
| Cost/YLG at median (mean) | $18,000 | $29,000 | $29,000 | $61,000 |
| Incremental cost-effectiveness ratios | ||||
| Extra cost ($)/extra early-tumour detected | $169,000 | $412,000 | ||
| Extra cost ($)/Extra YLG at Median (Mean) | $57,000 ($40,000) | $139,000 ($98,000) | ||
| Analysis with discounting | ||||
| Total cost for cohort (Base year 2012) | $357,000 | $814,000 | $587,000 | $1,702,000 |
| No. of early-tumours detected | 10 | 14 | 10 | 14 |
| Median (mean) YLG for Cohort | 27.8 (38.1) | 38.9 (53.3) | 27.8 (38.1) | 38.9 (53.3) |
| Cost/early-stage tumour detection | $36,000 | $58,000 | $59,000 | $122,000 |
| Cost/YLG at median (mean) | $13,000 ($9,400) | $21,000 ($15,000) | $21,000 ($15,000) | $44,000 ($32,000) |
| Incremental cost-effectiveness ratios | ||||
| Extra cost ($)/extra early-tumour detected | $114,000 | $279,000 | ||
| Extra cost ($)/extra YLG at median (mean) | $41,000 ($30,000) | $100,000 ($73,000) | ||
AFP, alpha-fetoprotein; HCC, hepatocellular carcinoma; US, ultrasound; YLG, years of life gained.
In a cohort of 839 hepatitis B virus infected AN men aged ≥40 years and women aged ≥50 years.
Total costs rounded to the nearest thousand.
Assumes patients received screening for HCC by serum AFP measurements initially and switched to ultrasound for all subsequent screenings if AFP >10 ng/mL.
Assumes patients received screening for HCC on dates for which AFP measurements were recorded.
Early-tumour if single tumour ≤5 cm in diameter or ≤3 tumours ≤3 cm in diameter; model assumes 33% (4) of tumours identified at a late stage by the AFP→US method were identified by the US-alone method at an early stage.
Ratio=(costs US-alone – costs AFP→US)/(outcome US-alone – outcome AFP→US), where outcomes are the number of early-tumours detected or number YLG by early detection. Treatment costs after the detection of tumour (early or late) are not included in these estimates.
Discounted direct costs of screening and YLG at 3%/year (reference year 2012) over a 30-year time horizon.
Fig. 1Sensitivity analysis: Impact of varying the percentage of hepatocellular carcinoma tumours that were identified by AFP→US at a late stage and potentially identified by US-alone at an early stage in hepatitis B virus infected AN persons.*†‡§¶
Abbreviations: AFP, alpha-fetoprotein; US, ultrasound; ↓, indicates base-case assumption
*Screening assumed to start for men at age ≥40 years and for women at age ≥50 years.
†AFP→US assumes patients received screening for HCC by serum AFP measurements initially and switched to ultrasound if AFP >10 ng/mL; screening method resembles the Alaska Native Health System hepatocellular carcinoma screening program.
‡The number of additional tumours that might have been detected at an early stage (i.e. single tumour ≤5 cm in diameter or ≤3 tumours ≤3 cm in diameter) by an US-alone method is unknown; therefore, sensitivity analysis determined the cost/early-stage tumour detected by assuming US-alone method identified 0–100% of the tumours identified by AFP→US at a late stage.
§Direct costs of screening discounted at 3%/year (reference year 2012) over a 30-year time horizon.
¶Assumes 60% of patients lived in a village without ready US access and required transportation to US facility.