Literature DB >> 31336016

Cost of screening for lung cancer in Australia.

Henry M Marshall1, Nicola Finn2, Rayleen V Bowman1, Linda H Passmore1, Elizabeth M McCaul1, Ian A Yang1, Luke Connelly2,3, Kwun M Fong1.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Lung cancer screening can reduce lung cancer mortality. Australian cost estimates are important to inform policy but remain uncertain. AIM: To describe the first direct medical costs associated with lung cancer screening in Australia.
METHODS: Single-centre prospective screening cohort. Healthy volunteers (age 60-74 years, current or former smokers quit <15 years prior to enrolment, ≥30 pack-years exposure) underwent baseline and two annual incidence computed tomography (CT) screening scans. Health status and healthcare usage data were collated for 5 years. The main outcome measures were: rates of lung cancer; individual healthcare resource use derived from multiple data sources adjusted to 2018 Australian Medicare Benefits Schedule values.
RESULTS: A total of 256, 239, 233 participants was screened at each round respectively; 12 participants were diagnosed with lung cancer during screening and 2 during follow-up: 9 underwent surgery, 4 received concurrent chemoradiation, 1 received palliative chemotherapy. One surgical case died from lymphoma 1407 days after diagnosis, all other surgical cases survived >5 years. Non-surgical median survival post-diagnosis was 654 days. Gross trial cost was Australian dollar (AU$) 965 665 (AU$397 396 CT scans; AU$29 303 false-positive scan work-up; AU$96 340 true-positive scan workup; AU$336 914 lung cancer treatment; AU$104 712 lung cancer follow-up post-treatment). Average total direct medical cost per participant was AU$3 768. Average direct cost of surgery was AU$22 659; average non-surgical cost was AU$47 395 (radiotherapy, chemotherapy, palliative care).
CONCLUSIONS: Advanced cancer cost more to treat and had worse survival than early cancer. Screening costs are similar to international studies and suggest that lung cancer early detection could limit treatment costs and improve outcomes.
© 2019 Royal Australasian College of Physicians.

Entities:  

Keywords:  early detection of cancer; healthcare economics; lung cancer; mass screening; multidetector computed tomography

Mesh:

Year:  2019        PMID: 31336016     DOI: 10.1111/imj.14439

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Intern Med J        ISSN: 1444-0903            Impact factor:   2.048


  1 in total

1.  A modeling analysis to compare eligibility strategies for lung cancer screening in Brazil.

Authors:  Adalberto Miranda-Filho; Hadrien Charvat; Freddie Bray; Arn Migowski; Li C Cheung; Salvatore Vaccarella; Mattias Johansson; Andre L Carvalho; Hilary A Robbins
Journal:  EClinicalMedicine       Date:  2021-11-01
  1 in total

北京卡尤迪生物科技股份有限公司 © 2022-2023.