| Literature DB >> 29347916 |
Sabina Sanghera1, Joanna Coast2,3, Richard M Martin4,5, Jenny L Donovan3,4, Syed Mohiuddin2,3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: There is ongoing debate about the harms and benefits of a national prostate cancer screening programme. Several model-based cost-effectiveness analyses have been developed to determine whether the benefits of prostate cancer screening outweigh the costs and harms caused by over-detection and over-treatment, and the different approaches may impact results.Entities:
Keywords: Cost-effectiveness; PSA test; Prostate cancer; Screening; Systematic review
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29347916 PMCID: PMC5773135 DOI: 10.1186/s12885-017-3974-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Cancer ISSN: 1471-2407 Impact factor: 4.430
Fig. 1Flow diagram of study selection process
Study characteristics
| Study | Setting | Population | Strategies compared | PSA threshold | Treatment | Outcome measure |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Chilcott et al. [ | UK | Men aged 50–74 | · single screen at 50 | 3.0 ng/ml | · prostatectomy with ADT | Cost per QALY gained |
| Heijnsdijk et al. [ | NR | Men aged 55–75 | 68 scenarios: | 3.0 ng/ml | · radiotherapy | Cost per QALY gained |
| · starting at age 55; screen intervals at 1, 2, 3, 4, 6, 8, 10, 12, 14 years | 3.0 ng/ml | · prostatectomy | ||||
| · once in a lifetime | 3.0 ng/ml | · active surveillance | ||||
| · age at stopping was varied 55–75 years | 3.0 ng/ml | · metastases: palliative care | ||||
| Hummel and Chilcott [ | UK | Men aged 50–74 | · single screen at 50: | 3.0 ng/ml | · radiotherapy (with and without hormone therapy) | Cost per QALY gained |
| · screen every 4 years from 50 to 74 years | 3.0 ng/ml | · prostatectomy (with and without hormone therapy) | ||||
| · screen every 2 years 50–74 years | 3.0 ng/ml | · watchful waiting | ||||
| · screen every year from 50 to 74 years | 3.0 ng/ml | · active monitoring | ||||
| Keller et al. [ | Australia | Men aged 50–69 | · opportunistic screening (current practice) | 3.0 ng/ml to 2.5 ng/mla | · prostatectomy | Cost per QALY gained |
| 3.0 ng/ml to 2.5 ng/mla | · watchful waiting | Cost per life year gained | ||||
| Kobayashi et al. [ | NR | Men aged 50–70 | · annual screen irrespective of baseline | N/A | no details on exact nature of treatments | Cost per QALY gained |
| · baseline PSA ≤ 1.0 ng/ml biennial rescreening | 1.0 ng/ml | |||||
| · baseline PSA ≤ 2.0 ng/ml biennial rescreening | 2.0 ng/ml | |||||
| · baseline PSA ≤ 3.0 ng/ml biennial rescreening | 3.0 ng/ml | |||||
| · baseline PSA ≤ 4.0 ng/ml biennial rescreening | 4.0 ng/ml | |||||
| Martin et al. [ | Australia | Men aged 50- (unclear) | · average risk: screen every 4 years | 4.0 ng/ml | · radiotherapy (with and without hormone therapy) | Cost per QALY gained |
| · high risk: screen every 4 years | 4.0 ng/ml | · prostatectomy (with and without hormone therapy) | ||||
| · very high risk: screen every 4 years | 4.0 ng/ml | · conservative management | ||||
| Pataky et al. [ | Canada | Men aged 40–74 | 14 scenarios: | · radiotherapy (with and without hormone therapy) | Cost per QALY gained and | |
| · Screen at 50, 60, 70 | 3.0 ng/ml | · prostatectomy (with and without hormone therapy) | ||||
| · Screen at 60 followed by screen at 65 | 3.0 ng/ml | · conservative management | Cost per life year gained | |||
| · screen every 4 years 55–69, 50–74 | 3.0 ng/ml | |||||
| · screen every 4 years 50–74 | 3.0 ng/ml, (4.0 ng/ml for ≥70 years old) | |||||
| · screen every 2 years 60–74, 50–69, 55–74, 50–74, 40–74 | 3.0 ng/ml | |||||
| · screen every 2 years 50–74 | 3.0 ng/ml, (4.0 ng/ml for ≥70 years old) | |||||
| · adaptive screen 50–74 | 3.0 ng/ml | |||||
| Roth et al. [ | US | Men aged 45–69 | 18 scenarios: | (1) all cases receive curative surgery, radiotherapy with or without adjuvant hormone therapy, | Cost per QALY gained and | |
| · screen yearly 45–69, 50–74, 55–69 | 4.0 ng/ml | (2) Gleason < 7, <T2a receive conservative treatment or curative treatment, all others as above | ||||
| · screen yearly 45–69, 50–74, 55–69 | 10.0 ng/ml | |||||
| · screen yearly if >3.0 ng/ml, every 2 years otherwise,45–69 | 3.0 ng/ml | Cost per life year gained | ||||
| · screen yearly if >3.0 ng/ml, every 2 years otherwise,45–69 | 10.0 ng/ml | |||||
| · screen every 4 years 50–74 | 4.0 ng/ml | |||||
| · screen every 4 years 50–74, 55–69 | 10.0 ng/ml | |||||
| · screen every 2 years if >1.0 ng/ml, every 4 years otherwise, 50–74 | 4.0 ng/ml | |||||
| · screen every 2 years if >1.0 ng/ml, every 4 years otherwise, 50–74 | 10.0 ng/ml | |||||
| · screen yearly with age dependent threshold, 50–74 | 3.5(50–59), 4.5(60–69), 6.5(70–74) | |||||
| · screen yearly with age dependent threshold 50–74 | 4.5(50–59), 5.5(60–69), 8.5(70–74) | |||||
| · screen every 2 years 55–69 | 3.0 ng/ml | |||||
| · screen every 4 years 55–69 | 3.0 ng/ml | |||||
| · screen every 2 years 55–69 | 10.0 ng/ml | |||||
| Wolstenholme et al. [ | UK | Men aged 50–65 | · single screen at 50, 55, 60 and 65 | 3.0 ng/ml | active surveillance, prostatectomy, radiotherapy, orchidectomy, hormonal therapy, chemotherapy | Cost per life year saved/gained |
| · screen every 5 years 50–65 | 3.0 ng/ml | |||||
| Shteynshlyuger & Andriole, [ | Europe | Men aged 60–70 | · “PSA screening reported in ERSPC”: | · Not reported. Assumed follows ERSPC trial | Cost per life year saved | |
| · screen every 4 years | 3.0 ng/ml or 4.0 ng/ml (depending on the centre) | |||||
| · no such screening | 3.0 ng/ml or 4.0 ng/ml (depending on the centre) |
a The study is based on the Goteburg centre of the ERSPC trial, which altered the PSA threshold overtime to reflect current recommendations. ADT androgen deprivation therapy
Cost-effectiveness results for studies reporting QALYs
| Study | Setting | Strategies compared | PSA threshold | ICER (Cost/QALY gained) | Threshold |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Chilcott et al. [ | UK | · single screen at 50 | 3.0 ng/ml | Dominateda | £20–30,000/QALY gained |
| · screen every 4 years from 50 to 74 years | 3.0 ng/ml | Dominated | |||
| · screen every 2 years 50–74 years | 3.0 ng/ml | Dominated | |||
| · screen every year from 50 to 74 | 3.0 ng/ml | Dominated | |||
| · screen at 50, 60, 65, 70 | 3.0 ng/ml | Dominated | |||
| · screen every 4 years 50–70, 55–74, 55–70 | 3.0 ng/ml | Dominated | |||
| · screen every 2 years 50–70, 55–74, 55–70 | 3.0 ng/ml | Dominated | |||
| Heijnsdijk et al. [ | NR | 68 scenarios (efficient strategies only): | 3.0 ng/ml | No formal threshold | |
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| · screen at 55 and then 57 years | 3.0 ng/ml | $38,563 | |||
| · screen at 55 and then 58 years | 3.0 ng/ml | $40,785 | |||
| · screen every 2 years 55–59 years | 3.0 ng/ml | $45,615 | |||
| · screen every 2 years 55–61 years | 3.0 ng/ml | $54,349 | |||
| · screen yearly 55–61 years | 3.0 ng/ml | $63,263 | |||
| · screen yearly 55–62 years | 3.0 ng/ml | $69,481 | |||
| · screen yearly 55–63 years | 3.0 ng/ml | $76,910 | |||
| Hummel and Chilcott [ | UK | · single screen at 50 | 3.0 ng/ml | Dominated | £20–30,000/QALY gained |
| · screen every 4 years from 50 to 74 years | 3.0 ng/ml | Dominated | |||
| · screen every 2 years 50–74 years | 3.0 ng/ml | Dominated | |||
| · screen every year from 50 to 74 years | 3.0 ng/ml | Dominated | |||
| Keller et al. [ | Australia | · opportunistic screening (current practice) | 3.0 ng/ml to 2.5 ng/ml | A$50,000/QALY gained | |
| · screen every 2 years from 50 to 69 years (immediate treatment) | 3.0 ng/ml to 2.5 ng/ml | A$147,528 | |||
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| Kobayashi et al. [ | NR | · annual screen irrespective of baseline, 50–70 | N/A | $165,938 | No formal threshold |
| · baseline PSA ≤ 1.0 ng/ml biennial rescreening, 50–70 | 1.0 ng/ml | $46,505 | |||
| · baseline PSA ≤ 2.0 ng/ml biennial rescreening, 50–70 | 2.0 ng/ml | $5925 | |||
| · baseline PSA ≤ 3.0 ng/ml biennial rescreening, 50–70 | 3.0 ng/ml | ||||
| · baseline PSA ≤ 4.0 ng/ml biennial rescreening. 50–70 | 4.0 ng/ml | Dominated | |||
| Martin et al. [ | Australia | · average risk screen: every 4 years, 50+ | 4.0 ng/ml | A$291,817 | A$50,000/QALY gained |
| · high risk screen: every 4 years, 50+ | 4.0 ng/ml | A$110,726 | |||
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| Pataky et al. [ | Canada | 14 scenarios: | CAN $50–80,000/QALY gained | ||
| · screen at 50, 60, 70 | 3.0 ng/ml | Dominated | |||
| · screen at 60 followed by screen at 65 | 3.0 ng/ml | Dominated | |||
| · screen every 4 years 55–69, 50–74 | 3.0 ng/ml | Dominated | |||
| · screen every 4 years 50–74 | 3.0 ng/ml, (4.0 ng/ml for ≥70 years old) | Dominated | |||
| · screen every 2 years 60–74, 50–69, 55–74, 50–74, 40–74 | 3.0 ng/ml | Dominated | |||
| · screen every 2 years 50–74 | 3.0 ng/ml, (4.0 ng/ml for ≥70 years old) | Dominated | |||
| · adaptive screen 50–74 | 3.0 ng/ml | Dominated | |||
| Roth et al. [ | US | 18 scenarios: Contemporary treatment scenario | |||
| · screen yearly 45–69, 50–74, 55–69 | 4.0 ng/ml | Dominated | US$ 50,000-150,000/QALY gained typically referred to (study refers to $150,000/QALY gained) | ||
| · screen yearly 45–69 | 10.0 ng/ml | US $326,292 | |||
| · screen yearly 50–74 | 10.0 ng/ml | US $330,065 | |||
| · screen yearly 55–69 | 10.0 ng/ml | US $300,884 | |||
| · screen yearly if >3.0 ng/ml, every 2 years otherwise,45–69 | 3.0 ng/ml | Dominated | |||
| · screen yearly if >3.0 ng/ml, every 2 years otherwise,45–69 | 10.0 ng/ml | US $184,074 | |||
| · screen every 4 years 50–74 | 4.0 ng/ml | Dominated | |||
| · screen every 4 years 50–74 | 10.0 ng/ml | US $170,195 | |||
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| · screen every 2 years if >1.0 ng/ml, every 4 years otherwise, 50–74 | 4.0 ng/ml | Dominated | |||
| · screen every 2 years if >1.0 ng/ml, every 4 years otherwise, 50–74 | 10.0 ng/ml | US $209,338 | |||
| · screen yearly with age dependent threshold, 50–74 | 3.5(50–59), 4.5(60–69), 6.5(70–74) | Dominated | |||
| · screen yearly with age dependent threshold 50–74 | 4.5(50–59), 5.5(60–69), 8.5(70–74) | Dominated | |||
| · screen every 2 years 55–69 | 3.0 ng/ml | Dominated | |||
| · screen every 4 years 55–69 | 3.0 ng/ml | Dominated | |||
| · screen every 2 years 55–69 | 10.0 ng/ml | US $170,981 | |||
| Selective treatment scenarios | |||||
| · screen yearly 45–69 | 4.0 ng/ml | US $163,214 | |||
| · screen yearly 50–74 | 4.0 ng/ml | US $243,768 | |||
| · screen yearly 55–69 | 4.0 ng/ml |
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| · screen yearly if >3.0 ng/ml, every 2 years otherwise,45–69 | 3.0 ng/ml | US $313,214 | |||
| · screen every 4 years 50–74 | 4.0 ng/ml |
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| · screen every 2 years if >1.0 ng/ml, every 4 years otherwise, 50–74 | 4.0 ng/ml |
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| · screen yearly with age dependent threshold, 50–74 | 3.5(50–59), 4.5(60–69), 6.5(70–74) | US $166,784 | |||
| · screen yearly with age dependent threshold 50–74 | 4.5(50–59), 5.5(60–69), 8.5(70–74) |
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| · screen every 2 years 55–69 | 3.0 ng/ml |
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Italicised text indicates potentially cost-effective scenario. a Dominated; the strategy is more costly and less effective than the comparator (commonly, usual practice)
Model characteristics
| Study | Model-type | Natural history model | By (TNM) stage of cancer? | TNM staging used | Differentiation by Gleason grade? | Gleason grading used | Time horizon | Deterministic sensitivity analysis | Probabilistic sensitivity analysis |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Chilcott et al. [ | Individual patient simulation | No | Yes | Localised (T1–2), Locally advanced (T3–4) and metastatic | Yes | (G < 7, G = 7, G > 7) | lifetime | Yes | Yes |
| Heijnsdijk et al. [ | Individual patient simulation | Yes -MISCAN | Yes | 18 stages: each tumour stage (T1,2 etc) modelled individually | Yes | (G < 7, G = 7, G > 7) | lifetime | Yes | No |
| Hummel and Chilcott [ | Individual patient simulation and cohort | No | Yes | Localised (T1–2), Locally advanced (T3–4) and metastatic | Yes | (G < 7, G = 7, G > 7) | lifetime | Yes | No |
| Keller et al. [ | Cohort model | No | Yes | Low (≤T1a), intermediate (≤T2b), high risk (>T2b) and metastatic | Yes | G ≤ 6, G ≤ 7, G > 7 | up to 70 years | Yes | Yes |
| Kobayashi et al. [ | Markov cycle tree (cohort) | No | Yes | Localised (T1–2), Locally advanced (T3–4) and metastatic | No | – | up to 80 years old | Yes | No |
| Martin et al. [ | Cohort model | No | No | None | No | – | 50 years (lifetime) | Yes | No |
| Pataky et al. [ | Individual patient simulation | Yes -adapted FHCRC | Yes | Locoregional (≤T2a vs > T2) | Assumed Yesa | Not reported | assumed lifetime | Yes | No |
| Roth et al. [ | Individual patient simulation | Yes -adapted FHCRC | Yes | Locoregional (≤T2a vs > T2) | Yesa | Indirectly (8–10/ 2–7) | lifetime | Yes | Yes |
| Wolstenholme et al. [ | Cohort model | No | Yes | Localised (T1–2), Locally advanced (T3–4) and metastatic | No | – | lifetime(100 years old) | Yes | Yes |
| Shteynshlyuger & Andriole, [ | Population based model | – | Yes | No details provided | – | – | lifetime | Yes | No |
a Based on values derived from the natural history, but Gleason is not explicitly modelled in the model-based economic evaluation
Characteristics of quality of life values used
| Study | Study setting | Perspective | Assessment of QoL | Population | Country |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Chilcott et al. [ | UK | NHS | HUI/EQ-5D | General population | UK/other |
| Heijnsdijk et al. [ | NR | Healthcare based on included costs | SG/EQ-5D/TTO/VAS | Patients/experts/ general population | Netherlands, US, Canada |
| Hummel and Chilcott [ | UK | NHS | HUI/EQ-5D | General population | UK/other |
| Keller et al. [ | Australia | Healthcare | SF-12/ SF-36/ othera, b | General population | Australia/ Finland |
| Kobayashi et al. [ | NR | Societal | TTO | Physicians/ patients | Unclear |
| Martin et al. [ | Australia | Healthcare | SF-12/ SG | Patient/ General population | US (adjusted)/ Australia |
| Pataky et al. [ | Canada | Healthcare based on included costs | SG | 2 different patient groups | Canada |
| Roth et al. [ | US | US payer perspective | SG | Patient | US |
HUI Health utility index, QoL quality of life, SG standard gamble, TTO Time trade off. aThe exact source of the value for advanced disease is unclear, it is likely to reflect a synthesis of EQ-5D and 15D.b assumed SF measures converted to SF-6D
Quality of life values assigned to health states
| Study | Starting state | Diagnosis | Treatment | Other | Advanced | End of life | Adverse effects | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Biopsy | Cancer | Short- term | Long-term | ||||||
| Chilcott, Hummel [ | Baseline = age dependent | – | – | 0.635 | Bowel function = 0.89 | ||||
| Heijnsdijk et al. [ | Screening = 0.99 | 0.9 | 0.8 | Radiation = 0.73 | Radiation = 0.78 | Post-recovery = 0.95 | 0.6 | 0.4 | Short-term & long-term effect |
| Prostatectomy = 0.67 | Prostatectomy = 0.77 | ||||||||
| Active surveillance = 0.97 | Active surveillance = 0.97 | ||||||||
| Hummel and Chilcott [ | Baseline = age dependent | 0.635 | Bowel function = 0.89 | ||||||
| Keller et al. [ | age dependent/ screening = 1.0 | 0.95b | 0.95b | 0.9 to >0.6b | See treatment: Persistent effects, 3 years post-diagnosis | ||||
| Kobayashi et al. [ | Curable = 0.9 | 0.5 | See curable: impotence & incontinence | ||||||
| Martin et al. [ | 0.95a | 0.5 | See cancer | ||||||
| Pataky et al. [ | Healthy screening population = 1.0 | 0.88 | 0.9 | Symptomatic =0.9 | 0.85 | 0.5 | Short-term & long-term effect | ||
| Roth et al. [ | Healthy screening population = 1.0 | 0.75 | 0.92 | Symptomatic =0.89 | 0.75 | 0.33 | Short-term & long-term effect | ||
| Surveillance = 0.92 | Surveillance = 0.92 | ||||||||
a Diagnosed and treated. bmultipliers of age dependent baseline value