| Literature DB >> 32933928 |
Karen M Kuntz1, Jonah Popp2, J Robert Beck3, Ann G Zauber4, David S Weinberg5.
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: Surveillance following colorectal cancer (CRC) resection uses optical colonoscopy (OC) to detect intraluminal disease and CT to detect extracolonic recurrence. CT colonography (CTC) might be an efficient use of resources in this situation because it allows for intraluminal and extraluminal evaluations with one test.Entities:
Keywords: colorectal cancer; cost-effectiveness; decision analysis; economic evaluation; surveillance
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32933928 PMCID: PMC7493100 DOI: 10.1136/bmjgast-2020-000450
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMJ Open Gastroenterol ISSN: 2054-4774
Figure 1Model diagram showing the intraluminal progression of adenomas to cancer of patients with resected colorectal cancer (CRC). We also allowed for the presence of hyperplastic polyps by size but they could not progress but could lead to colonoscopy if found by CT colonography.
Schedule of the surveillance strategies*
| Year after diagnosis | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 9 | 11 | 14 | 16 | 19 |
| Base-case strategies (assumes 3 years of CT) | |||||||||||
| Standard of care | OC+CT | CT | CT | OC | OC | OC | OC | ||||
| CTC-based | CTC | CT | CT | OC | OC | OC | OC | ||||
| Scenario analysis strategies (assumes 5 years of CT) | |||||||||||
| Standard of care | OC+CT | CT | CT | OC+CT | CT | OC | OC | OC | |||
| CTC-based | CTC | CT | CT | CTC | CT | OC | OC | OC | |||
| Scenario analysis strategies (assumes less intensive OC follow-up) | |||||||||||
| Standard of care | OC+CT | CT | CT | OC | OC | OC | |||||
| CTC-based | CTC | CT | CT | OC | OC | OC | |||||
*Schedule assumes that all test results show no lesion, hyperplastic polyp or adenoma <10 mm. Persons with adenomas 10 mm or larger get OC after 1 year and the 3 yearly thereafter.
CTC, CT colonography; OC, optical colonoscopy.
Model parameters
| Variable | Estimate (range) | Distribution | Source |
| Residual adenoma prevalence at initial CRC diagnosis (most advanced lesion) | |||
| Adenoma 1–5 mm | 0.15 (0.11–0.20) | Beta (35, 196) | |
| Adenoma 6–9 mm | 0.11 (0.08–0.16) | Beta (26, 205) | |
| Adenoma 10 mm or larger | 0.04 (0.02–0.07) | Beta (10, 221) | |
| Preclinical localised CRC | 0.001* | Uniform (0, 0.002) | |
| Hyperplastic polyp 1–5 mm | 0.130 (0.09–0.18) | Beta (30, 201) | |
| Hyperplastic polyp 6–9 mm | 0.048 (0.02–0.08) | Beta (11, 220) | |
| Hyperplastic polyp 10 mm or larger | 0.013 (0.003–0.03) | Beta (3, 228) | |
| Test characteristics (person-based; for most advanced lesion) | |||
| Sensitivity (CTC) | |||
| Polyp 1–5 mm | 0.31 (0.17–0.47)† | Beta (11, 24) | |
| Polyp 6–9 mm | 0.38 (0.21–0.57) | Beta (10, 16) | |
| Polyp 10 mm or larger, or CRC | 0.80 (0.52–0.97) | Beta (8, 2) | |
| Specificity (CTC) | 0.84 (0.78–0.89) | Beta (134, 26) | |
| Sensitivity (OC) | |||
| Polyp 1–5 mm | 0.55 (0.45–0.64) | Beta (56, 46) | |
| Polyp 6–9 mm | 0.67 (0.54–0.79) | Beta (35, 17) | |
| Polyp 10 mm or larger, or CRC | 0.95 (0.84–1.00) | Beta (21, 1) | |
| Specificity for adenomas (OC) | 1.00 | Assumed constant | |
| Colonoscopy risks (per 1000 polypectomies) | |||
| Death | 0.033 (0.00003–0.166) | Beta (0.493, 14 994) | |
| Nonfatal perforation | 0.60 (0.36–0.91) | Beta (18, 29 988) | |
| GI bleed | 6.66 (5.77–7.61) | Beta (201, 29 988) | |
| Quality-of-life weights | |||
| Utilities | |||
| Localised cancer | 0.74 (0.69–0.79) | Normal (0.74, 0.026) | |
| Regional cancer | 0.63 (0.58–0.68) | Normal (0.11, 0.008)‡ | |
| Distant cancer | 0.25 (0.20–0.30) | Normal (0.25, 0.026) | |
| Disutility | |||
| Perforation or GI bleed | 0.038 (0.001–0.075) | Uniform (0.001, 0.075) | |
| Costs | |||
| Tests | |||
| OC without polypectomy | US$700 (US$684–US$717) | Normal (700, 8.2) | |
| OC with polypectomy | US$1033 (US$930–US$1156) | Normal (1033, 60.7) | |
| CTC | US$244 (US$228–US$275) | Normal (244, 7.7) | |
| Colonoscopy complications | |||
| Perforation | US$14 949 (US$12 019–US$17 879) | Normal (14949, 1494.9) | |
| Serious gastrointestinal event | US$6256 (US$4849–US$7213) | Normal (6256, 625.6) | |
| Cancer care | |||
| Initial year, localised CRC | US$33 629 (US$32 745–US$34 538) | LN (10.42, 0.0136) | |
| Initial year, regional CRC | US$48 053 (US$47 065–US$49 062) | LN (10.78, 0.0106) | |
| Initial year, distant CRC | US$66 327 (US$63 375–US$47 301) | LN (11.00, 0.0188) | |
| Continuing, localised CRC | US$2352 (US$2071–US$2483) | LN (7.76, 0.0463) | |
| Continuing, regional CRC | US$2912 (US$2573–US$3063) | LN (7.98, 0.0445) | |
| Continuing, distant CRC | US$9920 (US$8489–US$10 638) | LN (9.20, 0.0576) | |
| Death from distant CRC | US$76 310 (US$74 555–US$78 086) | LN (11.24, 0.0119) | |
*Assumption.
†Assumed to be 0 in base case.
‡Models the difference between the utility of localised and regional CRC.
CRC, colorectal cancer; CTC, CT colonography; GI, gastrointestinal; LN, Lognormal; OC, optical colonoscopy.
Cost-effectiveness results for cohort of 60-year-old patients with resected colorectal cancer*
| Scenario and strategy | Total cost (US$) | Health effects (QALYs) | Incremental | Incremental QALYs | ICER (US$/QALY) |
| Stage III patients | |||||
| CTC-based strategy | 121 099 | 8.0721 | |||
| Standard of care | 121 392 | 8.0774 | 293 | 0.0053 | 55 498 |
| Stage II patients | |||||
| CTC-based strategy | 112 300 | 9.3684 | |||
| Standard of care | 112 557 | 9.3748 | 257 | 0.0064 | 40 193 |
*Costs and effects are generated under the assumption of 100% systematic adherence to surveillance. A lower systematic adherence would reduce costs and effects proportionally but ICERs would remain unchanged.
CTC, CT colonography; ICER, incremental cost-effectiveness ratio; QALY, quality-adjusted life year.
Expected outcomes per 1000 individuals with resected stage III colorectal cancer
| Outcome | Strategy | Difference† | |
| CTC-based* | Standard of care | ||
| Number of colonoscopies | 3124.1 | 3912.8 | 788.7 |
| Number of new CRC cases | 12.5 | 9.9 | −2.6 |
| Number of CRC deaths‡ | 318.1 | 317.0 | −1.1 |
*Assuming 3 yearly CT scans.
†Standard of care minus CTC-based strategy; values could be off due to rounding.
‡Includes cancer deaths associated with the initial cancer diagnosis.
CRC, colorectal cancer; CTC, CT colonography.
Figure 2Results from one-way sensitivity analyses. Ranges used to vary each parameter are indicted. Results are for 60-year-old stage III resected colorectal cancer and represent the incremental cost-effectiveness ratio of standard of care compared with the CT colonography-based strategy.
Figure 3Cost-effectiveness acceptability curve showing the probabilities of standard of care and the CT colonography (CTC)-based strategy being cost-effective in 60-year-old patients with stage III resected colorectal cancer as the cost-effectiveness threshold varies. Also shown is the cost-effectiveness acceptability frontier (CEAF) indicating the probability of being cost-effective for the optimal strategy.