| Literature DB >> 35197123 |
Elisavet Syriopoulou1, Alessandro Gasparini2, Keith Humphreys2, Therese M-L Andersson2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: An increasingly popular measure for summarising cancer prognosis is the loss in life expectancy (LLE), i.e. the reduction in life expectancy following a cancer diagnosis. The proportion of life lost (PLL) can also be derived, improving comparability across age groups as LLE is highly age-dependent. LLE and PLL are often used to assess the impact of cancer over the remaining lifespan and across groups (e.g. socioeconomic groups). However, in the presence of screening, it is unclear whether part of the differences across population groups could be attributed to lead time bias. Lead time is the extra time added due to early diagnosis, that is, the time from tumour detection through screening to the time that cancer would have been diagnosed symptomatically. It leads to artificially inflated survival estimates even when there are no real survival improvements.Entities:
Keywords: Lead time bias; Loss in life expectancy; Mammography screening; Simulation study
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35197123 PMCID: PMC8867879 DOI: 10.1186/s13058-022-01505-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Breast Cancer Res ISSN: 1465-5411 Impact factor: 6.466
Desciptives (averages from 200 simulations) for the simulated datasets without screening and with screening assuming moderate screening sensitivity and imperfect attendance
| No screening | Screening | |
|---|---|---|
| Number diagnosed | 2955 | 3010 |
| Mean age at diagnosis | 61 | 60 |
| 25th percentile of age | 50 | 49 |
| Median age | 62 | 61 |
| 75th percentile of age | 73 | 72 |
| % Dead within 12 years | 63.0 | 60.9 |
| % Size smaller than 17.5 | 39.0 | 56.8 |
| % Size 17.5–32.5 | 44.2 | 30.2 |
| % Size 32.5–47.5 | 12.2 | 8.9 |
| % Size larger than 47.5 | 4.6 | 4.1 |
Proportion screen detected, and mean and median lead-time (in years) among screen detected cases in different simulation screening scenarios
| Attendance | Screening | Number diagnosed | % screen detected | Lead time (mean) | Lead time (median) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Perfect | Low | 2999 (2901–3098) | 35.2 (33.7–37.1) | 2.01 (1.83–2.22) | 1.01 (0.92–1.10) |
| Perfect | Moderate | 3028 (2925–3136) | 45.1 (43.2–47.1) | 2.45 (2.27–2.64) | 1.34 (1.22–1.45) |
| Perfect | High | 3062 (2959–3171) | 53.0 (51.0–54.9) | 2.98 (2.80–3.22) | 1.72 (1.61–1.84) |
| Imperfect | Low | 2988 (2887–3075) | 27.1 (25.1–28.8) | 1.98 (1.74–2.27) | 1.01 (0.91–1.11) |
| Imperfect | Moderate | 3010 (2904–3106) | 35.3 (33.7–36.8) | 2.42 (2.22–2.67) | 1.32 (1.19–1.45) |
| Imperfect | High | 3035 (2928–3143) | 42.1 (40.6–44.0) | 2.93 (2.71–3.19) | 1.70 (1.55–1.83) |
All numbers are averages (with 2.5 and 97.5 percentiles in parenthesis) based on 200 simulations
Estimates of externally age-standardised 10-year relative survival (RS) in percentages, loss in life expectancy (LLE) in years and proportion of life lost (PLL) in percentages in the absence of screening as well as in the presence of screening across different screening sensitivities and attendance scenarios
| Attendance | Screening | 10-Year RS | LLE | PLL |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| — | None | 50.96 (48.18–54.04) | 8.08 (7.62–8.50) | 44.13 (41.58–46.39) |
| Perfect | Low | 52.35 (49.36–55.44) | 7.80 (7.37–8.20) | 42.95 (40.56–45.13) |
| Perfect | Moderate | 53.47 (50.72–55.91) | 7.63 (7.24–8.00) | 42.18 (39.95–44.21) |
| Perfect | High | 54.81 (52.27–57.50) | 7.48 (7.08–7.89) | 41.47 (39.29–43.73) |
| Imperfect | Low | 52.05 (49.29–54.91) | 7.87 (7.45–8.29) | 43.22 (40.84–45.56) |
| Imperfect | Moderate | 52.83 (49.69–55.65) | 7.74 (7.33–8.16) | 42.69 (40.37–44.95) |
| Imperfect | High | 53.83 (51.24–56.47) | 7.63 (7.20–8.07) | 42.16 (39.88–44.65) |
All numbers are averages (with 2.5 and 97.5 percentiles in parenthesis) based on 200 simulations
Fig. 1Bias for externally age-standardised 10-year relative survival, loss in life expectancy (LLE) and proportion of life lost (PLL) across different screening sensitivities and attendance scenarios, with 95% confidence intervals based on the Monte Carlo error for bias (across 200 simulations). Bias was obtained as the difference to the setting in which no screening is imposed and all cases are symptomatic
Fig. 2Average relative bias for externally age-standardised 10-year relative survival, loss in life expectancy (LLE) and proportion of life lost (PLL) across different screening sensitivities and attendance scenarios, with 2.5 and 97.5 percentiles based on 200 simulations. The reference scenario is the setting in which no screening is imposed and all cases are symptomatic