| Literature DB >> 31805871 |
Beate Jahn1, Gaby Sroczynski1, Marvin Bundo1, Nikolai Mühlberger1, Sibylle Puntscher1, Jovan Todorovic1, Ursula Rochau1, Willi Oberaigner1, Hendrik Koffijberg2, Timo Fischer3, Irmgard Schiller-Fruehwirth3, Dietmar Öfner4, Friedrich Renner5, Michael Jonas6, Monika Hackl7, Monika Ferlitsch8,9, Uwe Siebert10,11,12,13.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Clear evidence on the benefit-harm balance and cost effectiveness of population-based screening for colorectal cancer (CRC) is missing. We aim to systematically evaluate the long-term effectiveness, harms and cost effectiveness of different organized CRC screening strategies in Austria.Entities:
Keywords: Colonoscopy; Colorectal cancer; Screening; State-transition cohort model, Markov model
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31805871 PMCID: PMC6896501 DOI: 10.1186/s12876-019-1121-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Gastroenterol ISSN: 1471-230X Impact factor: 3.067
Fig. 1Natural history, impact of screening, and surveillance of the CRC state-transition cohort model. Green arrows – detected, red arrows – progression, blue arrows – switching strategy if adenoma, advanced adenoma or cancer remain undetected or low risk adenoma are detected. UICC - Union for International Cancer Control classification, CRC - colorectal cancer. Regular: regular screening, 3 year: 3-yearly surveillance, 5 year: 5-yearly surveillance. Each bubble represents a health state. Each arrow represents possible transitions between health states, which may occur each year. All individuals start in the healthy state with regular screening. Over time, individuals can develop adenomas. Adenomas can be detected by screening and removed. As a consequence, individuals move back to the healthy state. If advanced adenomas are detected and removed, individuals move back to the healthy state, but with 3-yearly surveillance. If adenomas are not detected, they can progress to advanced adenomas and cancer. Any cancer may be diagnosed at any stage by symptoms or screening. Individuals with diagnosed cancer (symptoms or screening) move to the diagnosed health states where they receive treatment. Individuals with diagnosed CRC may die from CRC. Individuals in any health state may die from other causes according to the age- and sex-specific mortality in Austria. The blue area includes the health states for individuals participating in the regular screening program (according to the investigated screening strategy). The yellow area includes the health states for individuals participating in 3-yearly surveillance (after detection of an advanced adenoma). The brown area includes the health states of the 5-yearly-surveillance program (after detecting non-advanced or no adenoma in the 3-yearly surveillance screening). The health states in these paths are similar compared to the health states of individuals participating in the regular screening program. Only the intervals of screening are shorter compared to the regular screening. If non-advanced adenomas are detected in the regular screening (i.e., according to the screening strategy), individuals will continue with screening using colonoscopy independent from the originally evaluated screening test. Individuals with diagnosed CRC may die from CRC
Aggregated costs of tests, staging, inpatient, medication, follow-up, screening, complications and end-of-life (index year 2017)
| Item | Costs at index year 2017, EUR |
|---|---|
| Costs for tests | |
| Colonoscopy | 228 |
| Polypectomy | 64 |
| gFOBT (gFOBT stool test only) | 37 (0.83) |
| FIT (FIT stool test only) | 41 (0.89) |
| Staging costs (weighted mean of colorectal cancer and rectal cancer) | 461 |
| Aggregated inpatient-care costs (weighted mean of colorectal cancer and rectal cancer at UICC level) | |
| UICC I | 13,831 |
| UICC II | 18,699 |
| Costs UICC III | 19,038 |
| Costs UICC IV | 24,059 |
| Aggregated medication costs (UICC IV) | 12,433 |
| Aggregated follow-up costs (weighted mean of colorectal cancer and rectal cancer separately for follow-up year, including medical consultation, tumor marker laboratory, colonoscopy/rectoscopy, CT) | |
| Costs: Year 1 | 552 |
| Costs: Year 2 | 367 |
| Costs: Year 3 | 349 |
| Costs: Year 4 | 419 |
| Costs: Year 5 | 237 |
| Costs: Year 9, 14, lifelong every 60 months | 228 |
| Costs for screening program | |
| Colonoscopy screening program (10-yearly) | 1,950,353 |
| Stool-based screening program (annually) | 4,118,142 |
| Costs of complications (inpatient stay) | |
| Surgical procedures | 23,258 |
| Inpatient stay | 5250 |
| End-of-life costs (inpatient care + medication) | |
| One-time costs, cancer death at UICC I and UICC II | 55,530 |
| One-time costs, cancer death at UICC III | 36,492 |
EUR Euro, gFOBT Guaiac-fecal occult blood test, FIT Fecal immunochemical test, UICC Union for International Cancer
Comparative population fact box for benefits and harms (per 1000 persons)
| Outcome | 10-yearly Colonoscopy | Annual FIT | Differences FIT vs. Colonoscopy |
|---|---|---|---|
| Life-years gained: | 394 | 491 | 97 |
| CRC-related deaths averted | 30 | 35 | 5 |
| CRC cases averted | 61 | 69 | 8 |
| Additional complications due to colonoscopy (hospital admissions) | 1.2 | 1.2 | 0 |
| Total positive test results | 679 | 2206 | 1527 |
Numbers pertain to a cohort of 1000 persons 40 years of age who were followed until death in comparison to No Screening. Full adherence to screening strategies including follow-up and surveillance tests was assumed. CRC Colorectal cancer, FIT Fecal immunochemical test screening strategy. FIT: 40–75 years old average - risk men and women. Colonoscopy: 50–70 years old average - risk men and women, all screening strategies include index testing, further diagnostics (including colonoscopy), surveillance (colonoscopy), treatment and follow up interventions; annual guaiac-fecal occult blood test screening strategy is dominated by annual FIT in benefit - harm analysis and, therefore, not included in table.
Comparative individual fact box for benefits and harms (per person)
| Outcome: | 10-yearly Colonoscopy | Annual FIT | Differences FIT vs. Colonoscopy |
|---|---|---|---|
| Life-weeks gaineda | 21 | 26 | 5 |
| Probability of dying from CRC (%) | 0.8 | 0.3 | − 0.5 |
| Probability of developing CRC (%) | 2.2 | 1.4 | −0.8 |
| Mean number of complications due to colonoscopy (hospital admissions) | 0.0012 | 0.0012 | 0 |
| Mean number of positive test results | 0.7 | 2.2 | 1.5 |
Numbers pertain to an individual average 40 years of age who were followed until death. Full adherence to screening strategies including follow-up and surveillance tests was assumed. ain comparison to No Screening, CRC - colorectal cancer, FIT - fecal immunochemical test screening strategy. FIT: 40–75 years old average - risk men and women. Colonoscopy: 50–70 years old average - risk men and women, all screening strategies include index testing, further diagnostics (including colonoscopy), surveillance (colonoscopy), treatment and follow up interventions; annual guaiac-fecal occult blood test screening strategy is dominated by annual FIT in benefit harm analysis and, therefore, not included in table.
Health economic results of colorectal cancer screening programs
| Screening Strategy | LYG | Disc. LYG | Costs [EUR] | Disc. costs [EUR] | Disc. incr. LYG | Disc. incr. Costs [EUR] | ICER [EUR/LYG] |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| No Screening | – | – | 2890 | 1138 | – | – | dominated |
| 10-yearly Colonoscopy | 0.39 | 0.12 | 1440 | 754 | |||
| Annual gFOBT | 0.48 | 0.15 | 2341 | 1398 | – | – | dominated |
| Annual FIT | 0.49 | 0.16 | 2257 | 1352 | 0.04 | 598 | 14,960 |
LYG Life-years gained compared to No Screening per individual, disc Discounted, ICER Incremental cost-effectiveness ratio, gFOBT Guaiac-fecal occult blood test screening strategy, FIT Fecal immunochemical test screening strategy, EUR Euro. FIT and gFOBT: 40–75 years old average - risk men and women. Colonoscopy: 50–70 years old average - risk men and women, all screening strategies include index testing, further diagnostics (including colonoscopy), surveillance (colonoscopy), treatment and follow up interventions. Full adherence to screening strategies including follow-up and surveillance tests was assumed.
Fig. 2Cost effectiveness of colorectal screening strategies. Blue cross - No Screening, red circle - colonoscopy, purple square - gFOBT, green triangle - FIT. D - dominated, ICER - incremental cost-effectiveness ratio, gFOBT - guaiac-fecal occult blood test screening strategy, FIT - fecal immunochemical test screening strategy, EUR - Euro, LYG - life-years gained, FIT and gFOBT: 40–75 years old average-risk men and women, annual. Colonoscopy: 50–70 years old average-risk men and women, 10-yearly. All screening strategies include index testing, further diagnostics (including colonoscopy), surveillance (colonoscopy), treatment and follow up interventions. Base-case analysis: assumes full participation and adherence
Summary one-way sensitivity analyses
| Analysis / adapted parameters | Comments | ICER [EUR/LYG] | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Base case | 14,960 | ||
| Survival probability | Survival probability for patients diagnosed with cancer unadjusted for mode of detection | 17,595 | |
| Participation rate | Colonoscopy 20.0%; FIT 38.9%, gFOBT 31.1% | FIT is dominant | |
| Participation rate | Colonoscopy 28.0%; FIT 38.9%, gFOBT 31.1% | FIT is dominant | |
| Costs examination | Cost for screening colonoscopy examination EUR 352, polypectomy EUR 98 | 15,853 | |
| Test accuracy | Relative reduction of sensitivity of FIT and gFOBT (0%; 60%)a | 14,960 | 58,131 |
| Discount rate | Assumed discount rate (0; 10%) | 8493 | 48,911 |
| Costs examination | Relative increase in costs of colonoscopy examination and polypectomy (0, 100%) | 14,960 | 16,156 |
| Costs treatment | Inpatient-care costs treating cancer stage UICC IV (relative increase 0, 50%) | 14,960 | 14,678 |
afurther reduction lead to FIT being the dominated by colonoscopy, gFOBT Guaiac-fecal occult blood test screening strategy, FIT Fecal immunochemical test screening strategy, dominant – screening strategy that is both more effective and less costly compared to all other strategies examined. ICER Incremental cost-effectiveness ratio, EUR Euro, LYG Life-years gained, UICC Union for International Cancer Control classification. FIT and gFOBT: 40–75 years old average - risk men and women, annual. Colonoscopy: 50–70 years old average - risk men and women, 10-yearly, all screening strategies include index testing, further diagnostics (including colonoscopy), surveillance (colonoscopy), treatment and follow up interventions