| Literature DB >> 29995100 |
Juliana Yukari Kodaira Viscondi1, Christine Grutzmann Faustino1, Alessandro Gonçalves Campolina2, Alexander Itria3, Patricia Coelho de Soárez1.
Abstract
The aim of this study was to critically evaluate the quality of the models used in economic evaluations of screening strategies for cervical cancer prevention. We systematically searched multiple databases, selecting model-based full economic evaluations (cost-effectiveness analyses, cost-utility analyses, and cost-benefit analyses) of cervical cancer screening strategies. Two independent reviewers screened articles for relevance and performed data extraction. Methodological assessment of the quality of the models utilized formal checklists, and a qualitative narrative synthesis was performed. Thirty-eight articles were reviewed. The majority of the studies were conducted in high-income countries (82%, n=31). The Pap test was the most used screening strategy investigated, which was present in 86% (n=33) of the studies. Half of the studies (n=19) used a previously published Markov model. The deterministic sensitivity analysis was performed in 92% (n=35) of the studies. The mean number of properly reported checklist items was 9 out of the maximum possible 18. Items that were better reported included the statement of decision problem, the description of the strategies/comparators, the statement of time horizon, and information regarding the disease states. Compliance with some items of the checklist was poor. The Markov models for economic evaluation of screening strategies for cervical cancer varied in quality. The following points require improvement: 1) assessment of methodological, structural, heterogeneity, and parameter uncertainties; 2) model type and cycle length justification; 3) methods to account for heterogeneity; and 4) report of consistency evaluation (through calibration and validation methods).Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29995100 PMCID: PMC6024522 DOI: 10.6061/clinics/2018/e385
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Clinics (Sao Paulo) ISSN: 1807-5932 Impact factor: 2.365


Figure 1Flowchart of systematic review selection process.
HEE: health economic evaluation
Characteristics of the economic evaluation of the included Markov model-based studies.
| Study | Country | Screening tests | Target pop | Study type | Currency (year) | ICER (I$) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| (McCrory et al. 1999) | USA | PAP, NewCyto | 15-85 years | CEA | USD (1997) | 32,503.08/LY |
| (Hutchinson et al. 2000) | USA | PAP, AutoPap, LBC | 20-65 years | CEA | USD (1997) | 73,837.07/LY |
| (Myers et al. 2000) | USA | PAP, NewCyto | 15-85 years | CEA | USD (1997) | 4,310.60/LY |
| (Taylor et al. 2000) | USA | PAP, PAP+speculoscopy | 18-65 years | CEA | USD (2001) | not calculated |
| (Montz et al. 2001) | USA | PAP, LBC | 20-80 years | CEA | USD (1997) | 26,532.61/LY |
| (Mandelblatt et al. 2002) | USA | PAP, LBC, HC2 | ≥20 years | CUA | USD (2000) | 96,826.00/QALY |
| (Kulasingam and Myers 2003) | USA | PAP | 12-85 years | CEA | USD (2001) | 60,076.00/LY |
| (Goldie et al. 2004a) | USA | PAP, LBC, HC2, HC2+Cyto | ≥30 years | CEA | USD (2001) | 41,488.03/LY |
| (Goldie et al. 2004b) | USA | PAP, LBC, HC2 | ≥12 years | CUA | USD (2002) | 77,073.34/QALY |
| (Karnon et al. 2004) | GBR | PAP, LBC | 15-95 years | CEA | GBP (NI) | 16,782.16/LY |
| (Kim et al. 2004) | HKG | PAP, LBC | ≥15 years | CEA | USD (2000) | 12,821.96/LY |
| (Sherlaw-Johnson and Philips 2004) | GBR | PAP, LBC, HPV test | ≥15 years | CEA | GBP (2001) | 6,010.34/LY |
| (Kim et al. 2005) | GBR, NLD, FRA, ITA | PAP, HC2, PAP+HC2 | NI | CEA | USD (2004) | 23,590.95 - 106,985.77/LY |
| (Anderson et al. 2008) | AUS | PAP | 15-85 years | CEA | USD (NI) | 252,485.84/LY |
| (Andres-Gamboa et al. 2008) | COL | PAP, HPV test | 15-76 years | CEA | USD (2006) | 262,302.32/LY |
| (Bistoletti et al. 2008) | SWE | PAP, PAP+HPV test | ≥32 years | CEA | USD (2005) | 7,132.05/LY |
| (Gutierrez-Delgado et al. 2008) | MEX | PAP, HC2, PAP+HC2 | 12-64 years | CUA | MXN (2006) | 209,410.00/DALY |
| (Rogoza et al. 2008) | CAN, NLD, TWN, GBR, USA | PAP | ≥12 years | CEA and CUA | CAD,EUR,NTD,GBP,USD (2006) | 9,203.22 - 1,173,080.66/QALY |
| (Coupe et al. 2009) | NLD | PAP, HPV test | 12-100 years | CUA | EUR (2006) | 11,810.39/QALY |
| (Ginsberg et al. 2009) | WHO 14 regions | PAP, HPV test, PAP+HPV test, VIA | NI | CUA | I (2000) | 156.91 - 63,616.09/DALY |
| (Kulasingam et al. 2009) | CAN | PAP, HC2, PAP+HC2 | NI | CEA and CUA | CAD (2006) | 7,060.14/LY |
| (Reynales-Shigematsu et al. 2009) | MEX | PAP | 12-85 years | CEA | USD (2004) | 2,075.00/LY |
| (Balasubramanian et al. 2010) | USA | LBC, HPV test, Self-colletion | 12-85 years | CUA | USD (2007) | 15,142.00/QALY |
| (Chuck 2010) | CAN | PAP, LBC, HC2 | 12-80 years | CUA | CAD (2007) | 16,528.54/QALY |
| (Creighton et al. 2010) | AUS | PAP | 10-84 years | CEA | AUD (NI) | 30,583.80/LY |
| (Sroczynski et al. 2010) | DEU | PAP, PAP+HC2 | ≥15 years | CEA | EUR (2007) | 107,285.43/LY |
| (Chen et al. 2011) | TWN | PAP, HPV test | NI | CEA | USD (NI) | 64,249.86/LY |
| (Kitchener et al. 2011) | GBR | LBC, HC2, Self-colletion | 10-84 years | CEA and CUA | GBP (2007) | 49,193.51/LY |
| (Praditsitthikorn et al. 2011) | THA | PAP, VIA | ≥15 years | CUA | THB (2007) | 543,574.08/QALY |
| (Shi et al. 2011) | CHN Rural | VIA, VIA/VILI, HPV test | NI | CEA and CUA | USD (2009) | 30,206.17/LY |
| (Sopina and Ashton 2011) | NZL | LBC, HPV test | 12-85 years | CEA and CUA | NZD (2009) | 9,164.45/QALY |
| (Sroczynski et al. 2011) | DEU | PAP, HC2, PAP+HC2 | ≥15 years | CEA | EUR (2007) | 177,473.23/LY |
| (Vokó et al. 2012) | HUN | PAP | ≥25 years | CUA | HUF (NI) | 33,339.15/QALY |
| (Yamamoto et al. 2012) | JPN | PAP | ≥11 years | CUA | JPY (2010) | 28,865.17/QALY |
| (Fonseca et al. 2013) | BRA Amazon | PAP | ≥12 years | CUA | USD (NI) | 1,341.06/QALY |
| (Ostensson et al. 2013) | SWE | PAP, HPV test | ≥15 years | CEA | EUR (2011) | 8,795.19/LY |
| (Huh et al. 2015) | USA | PAP, HPV test, PAP+HPV test | 30-70 years | CUA | USD (2013) | 7,800.62/QALY |
| (Nghiem et al. 2015) | USA | LBC, HPV test | ≥12 years | CUA | USD (2012) | 18,854.49/QALY |
Countries classified according to the list of country names and 3-letter codes abbreviations by the United Nations (http://unstats.un.org/unsd/methods/m49/m49alpha.htm).
Screening tests: PAP = conventional cytological test also known as Papanicolaou (pap) smear test; New Cyto = hypothetical new cytological test; AutoPap = automated read cytological test; LBC = liquid-based cytology test; HC2 = Digene high-risk HPV Hybrid Capture© 2 test (Qiagen); HPVtest = Human Papillomavirus (HPV) DNA detection with genotyping high-risk types by polymerase chain reaction (PCR); Self-collection = high-risk HPV DNA testing of self-collected vaginal samples; VIA = visual inspection with acetic acid; VIA/VILI = VIA in combination with Lugol’s iodine.
Target population: women within the age range indicated.
Economic study type: CEA = cost-effectiveness analysis; CUA = cost-utility analysis.
Currencies classified according to the International Organization for Standardization, ISO 4217:2015 (http://www.iso.org/iso/home/standards/currency_codes.htm).
ICER = incremental cost-effectiveness ratio; I$: Geary-Khamis dollar, more commonly known as the international dollar; LY = life years; QALY = quality-adjusted life years; DALY = disability-adjusted life years; NI = Not informed.
Figure 2Decision-model characteristics of included studies.
1 Software: Others = WHO PopMod or C++ Program.
2 Sensitivity analysis: Det = deterministic, Prob = probabilistic.
NI = not informed.
Figure 3Proportion of economic evaluation studies adequately reporting checklist items (n=38).
