| Literature DB >> 28095411 |
Kate T Simms1,2, Michaela Hall1,2, Megan A Smith1,2,3, Jie-Bin Lew1,2, Suzanne Hughes1, Susan Yuill1, Ian Hammond4,5, Marion Saville6,7, Karen Canfell1,2,3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Several countries are implementing a transition to HPV testing for cervical screening in response to the introduction of HPV vaccination and evidence indicating that HPV screening is more effective than cytology. In Australia, a 2017 transition from 2-yearly conventional cytology in 18-20 to 69 years to 5-yearly primary HPV screening in 25 to 74 years will involve partial genotyping for HPV 16/18 with direct referral to colposcopy for this higher risk group. The objective of this study was to determine the optimal management of women positive for other high-risk HPV types (not 16/18) ('OHR HPV').Entities:
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Year: 2017 PMID: 28095411 PMCID: PMC5240951 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0163509
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Parameters used in the model and ranges explored in probabilistic sensitivity analysis*.
| Baseline values | Ranges explored in sensitivity analysis | Data informing assumptions | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Primary HPV test sensitivity (specificity) toCIN2+ | 96% (90%) | 95% - 98% (87% - 93%) | Positivity rates informed by international meta-analyses.[ |
| HPV test-of-cure sensitivity (specificity) toCIN2+ | 93% (81%) | 86% - 97% (74% - 86%) | |
| Unsatisfactory rate for the HPV test | 0% | 0%-1% | |
| LBC test sensitivity (specificity) toCIN2+ | ASC-US threshold: 77% (94%) | ASC-US threshold: 72% - 81% (92% - 95%) | Informed by a systematic review and meta-analysis comparing liquid-based and conventional cytology[ |
| Unsatisfactory rate for LBC test | 1.80% | 0.3%-2.6% | Informed by data from a prospective Australia-based study[ |
| Colposcopy sensitivity (specificity) to CIN2+ | 88% (52%) | 80–91% (49–74%) | Informed by a large dataset of >20,000 colposcopies from the Royal Women’s Hospital in Victoria.[ |
| Percent of positive HPV test results where HPV 16/18 is misclassified as other high-risk types | 0% | 0–5% | Assumption |
| Percent of positive HPV test results where OHR HPV types are misclassified as HPV 16/18 | 0% | 0–5% | Assumption |
| Probability of attending routine screening | Cumulative attendance in under 5 years is 9%; by 5 years is 80%; by 6 years in 85% | Attendance delayed by a year: cumulative attendance in under 6 years is 9%, and by 6 years is 80%. | Early and on-time attendance was informed by VCCR data and data from England (which has a call-recall system). Screening behaviour in under-screened women unchanged from current rates (based on VCCR data). |
| Probability of attendance for 12-month follow-up visits within a year | 65–85% (depends on age) | Rate increased/decreased by 10% | Informed by 12 month attendance as derived from VCCR data. |
| Probability of screening uptake at first invitation | 82% at age 25, 91% attend before the age of 30 | 74% at age 25, 85% attend before the age of 30 | Uptake at 25 years was assumed to be equivalent to update at or by 25 years as observed under current practice. |
| Probability of colposcopy attendance within a year after referral | 85–95% (depends on age) | Rate increased/decreased by 10% | Informed by data from the VCS and the Royal Women’s Hospital.[ |
| cytology test cost | $30.50 | $19.45-$42.00 | Expert advice from the Renewal Steering committee |
| HPV test cost | $30.00 | $20.00-$45.00 | |
| Natural history aggressiveness | 5% reduced progression rates; 5% increased progression rates^ | This variation produces cancer rates that fit within uncertainty ranges derived from AIHW.[ |
* The uniform distribution is used for probabilistic sensitivity analysis when parameters from the ranges are selected for all parameters except for the choice of test sensitivity and specificity for the HPV and LBC test–in these cases, one of the three combinations of sensitivity and specificity are selected each time (i.e. there is no continuous distribution, just three discrete choices).
** Variations in these parameters were also explored in one-way sensitivity analysis.
Fig 1The cumulative risk of developing invasive cervical cancer after 20 years* by age and management subgroup.
The 20-year risk of cervical cancer in women with LSIL in the pre-renewed NCSP with a negative test in last 2 years (accepted risk for 12-month repeat recommendation under the pre-renewed NCSP) is shown as the horizontal line in each graph. *The risk was evaluated in unvaccinated cohorts. It was assumed that the risk in cohorts offered vaccination would be equal to or lower than in unvaccinated cohorts (due to the potential impact of vaccine cross-protection against OHR HPV types).
Fig 2The cumulative risk of CIN3+ at 24 months* by age and management subgroup.
The 24-month risk of CIN3+ in women with LSIL with a negative test in last 2 years (accepted risk for 12-month repeat recommendation under the pre-renewed NCSP) is shown as the horizontal line in each graph. *The risk was evaluated in unvaccinated cohorts. It was assumed that the risk in cohorts offered vaccination would be equal to or lower than in unvaccinated cohorts (due to potential the impact of vaccine cross-protection against OHR HPV types).
Fig 3Model predicted annual number* of cancer cases (a), cancer deaths (b), colposcopies(c) and precancer treatments d) for unvaccinated cohorts (diamond) and cohorts offered vaccination (squares) under three strategies–pre-renewed NCSP, primary HPV screening in which women testing OHR HPV and ASC-US/LSIL are referred for 12-month follow-up, and primary HPV screening in which this group is referred for immediate colposcopy.** *Case numbers derived by applying predicted age-specific rates to the projected Australian female population for 2017.[63] **Numbers in parentheses represent the difference in case numbers and percentage difference compared to the pre-renewed NCSP.
Numbers* of cervical cancer cases, deaths and colposcopies predicted in a year under a range of screening scenarios for unvaccinated cohorts and cohorts offered vaccination at age 12 years**.
| # cancer cases | # cancer deaths | # precancer treatments | # colposcopies | # colposcopies required to avert a cancer case (# required to avert a cancer death) compared to 12-month follow-up | # precancer treatments required to avert a cancer case (# required to avert a cancer death) compared to 12-month follow-up | |
| Pre-renewed NCSP (current practice) | 850 | 227 | 22,700 | 85,800 | - | - |
| 12m follow-up | 584 (-265; -31%) | 145 (-82;-36%) | 24,000 (+1,300; 6%) | 116,900 (+31,100; 36%) | - | - |
| Immediate colposcopy | 574 (-275; -32%) | 142 (-85; -37%) | 24,500 (+1,800; 8%) | 123,600 (+37,800; 44%) | 653 (2337) | 55 (195) |
| 12m follow-up for women less than age 35, Immediate colposcopy if aged 35+ | 577 (-272; -32%) | 143 (-84; -37%) | 24,100 (+1,400; 6%) | 120,100 (+34,300; 40%) | 451 (1487) | 22 (73) |
| 12m follow-up for women less than age 45, immediate colposcopy if aged 45+ | 581 (-269; -32%) | 144 (-84; -37%) | 24,000 (+1,300; 6%) | 118,500 (+32,700; 38%) | 414 (1195) | 14 (41) |
| 12m follow-up for women less than age 55, immediate colposcopy if aged 55+ | 583 (-267; -31%) | 144 (-83; -37%) | 24,000 (+1,300; 6%) | 117,700 (+31,900; 37%) | 401 (1066) | 12 (32) |
| 12m follow-up for women less than age 65, immediate colposcopy if aged 65+ | 584 (-266; -31%) | 145 (-82; -36%) | 24,000 (+1,300; 6%) | 117,100 (+31,300; 36%) | 341 (901) | 12 (32) |
| # cancer cases | # cancer deaths | # precancer treatments | # colposcopies | # colposcopies required to avert a cancer case (# required to avert a cancer death) compared to 12 month follow-up | # precancer treatments required to avert a cancer case (# required to avert a cancer death) compared to 12 month follow-up | |
| Pre-renewed NCSP (current practice) | 353 | 94 | 13,900 | 61,000 | - | - |
| 12m follow-up | 267 (-85; -24%) | 66 (-28; -29%) | 13,200 (-700; -5%) | 56,500 (4,500; -7%) | - | - |
| Immediate colposcopy | 256 (-97; -27%) | 63 (-31; -33%) | 13,900 (0; 0%) | 64,300 (3,300;5%) | 684 (2452) | 59 (211) |
| 12m follow-up for women less than age 35, Immediate colposcopy if aged 35+ | 259 (-93; -26%) | 64 (-30; -32%) | 13,400 (-500; -3%) | 60000 (-1,000; -2%) | 451 (1482) | 22 (74) |
| 12m follow-up for women less than age 45, immediate colposcopy if aged 45+ | 263 (-90; -25%) | 65 (-29; -31%) | 13,300 (-600; -4%) | 58200 (-2,800; -5%) | 413 (1191) | 14 (41) |
| 12m follow-up for women less than age 55, immediate colposcopy if aged 55+ | 265 (-88; -25%) | 65 (-28; -30%) | 13,300 (-600; -5%) | 57400 (-3,600; -6%) | 399 (1059) | 12 (32) |
| 12m follow-up for women less than age 65, immediate colposcopy if aged 65+ | 267 (-86; -24%) | 66 (-28; -30%) | 13,200 (-700; -5%) | 56700 (-4,300; -7%) | 340 (888) | 12 (32) |
*Case numbers derived by applying predicted age-specific rates to the projected Australian female population for 2017.[63].
**Numbers in parentheses represent. the difference in case numbers and percentage difference compared to the pre-renewed NCSP.
The cost-effectiveness of immediate colposcopy compared to 12-month follow-up in women with OHR HPV and cytology ASC-US or LSIL.
| Incremental cost-effectiveness of immediate colposcopy compared to 12m follow-up in women with OHR HPV and cytology ASC-US or LSIL (A$/LYS) | ||
|---|---|---|
| Unvaccinated cohorts | Cohorts offered vaccination | |
| $104,600/LYS (95%CrI:$100,100–109,100) | $117,100/LYS (95%CrI:$112,300–122,000) | |
| $59,800/LYS (95%CrI:$55,800-$62,100) | $61,600/LYS (95%CrI:$58,300-$64,900) | |
| $39,800/LYS (95%CrI:$36,700-$41,900) | $40,900/LYS (95%CrI:$38,300-$43,600) | |
| $40,100/LYS (95%CrI:$36,100-$41,500) | $40,200/LYS (95%CrI:$37,500-$42,900) | |
| $38,100/LYS (95%CrI:$35,000-$40,500) | $39,400/LYS (95%CrI:$36,600-$42,200) | |
LYS = life-years saved.
*The ICER for immediate colposcopy for women of all ages was calculated against 12-month follow-up for women of all ages. If the ICER was instead calculated compared to immediate colposcopy for women aged 35+ years (which was the next most effective strategy), then the calculated ICER increased and was >$140,000/LYS for both unvaccinated cohorts and cohort offered vaccination.
Fig 4The incremental cost-effectiveness ratio (ICER) of immediate colposcopy compared to 12-month follow-up in women with OHR HPV and ASC-US/LSIL for parameters included in one-way sensitivity analysis–unvaccinated cohorts.
Fig 5The incremental cost-effectiveness ratio (ICER) of immediate colposcopy compared to 12-month follow-up in women with OHR HPV and ASC-US or LSIL for parameters included in one-way sensitivity analysis–cohorts offered vaccination.
Fig 6Model predicted annual number* of cancer cases (a), cancer deaths (b), colposcopies (c) and precancer treatments (d) for unvaccinated cohorts (diamond) and cohorts offered vaccination (squares) under three strategies–current practice, primary HPV screening in which women testing OHR HPV and ASC-US/LSIL are referred for 12-month follow-up, and primary HPV screening in which this group is referred for 12- and 24-month follow-up.** *Case numbers derived by applying predicted age-specific rates to the projected Australian female population for 2017.[63]** Numbers in parentheses represent the difference in case numbers and percentage difference compared to the pre-renewed NCSP.
The cost-effectiveness of 12- and 24-month HPV testing, compared to 12-month HPV testing only, in women with OHR HPV and cytology ASC-US/LSIL.
| Incremental cost-effectiveness ratio (ICER) of 12- and 24-month follow-up compared to 12-month follow-up only (A$/ LYS) | ||
|---|---|---|
| Unvaccinated cohorts | Cohorts offered vaccination | |
| $ 238,000 | $228,000 | |
| $147,000 | $143,000 | |
| $97,000 | $ 94,000 | |
| $72,000 | $71,000 | |
| Extended dominated | Extended dominated | |
LYS = life-years saved.
*The ICER for immediate colposcopy for all ages was calculated compared to 12-month follow-up for all ages. If the ICER was instead compared to immediate colposcopy for women aged 35+ years (which was the next most effective strategy), then the calculated ICER increased, and was >$300,000/LYS for both unvaccinated cohorts and cohort offered vaccination.
Extended dominated = the strategy has a higher ICER than a more effective strategy.