| Literature DB >> 35206519 |
Mbathio Dieng1, Robin M Turner2, Sarah J Lord1, Andrew J Einstein3, Alexander M Menzies4,5, Robyn P M Saw4,6,7, Omgo E Nieweg4,6,7, John F Thompson4,6,7, Rachael L Morton1,4.
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: To estimate the cost-effectiveness of three surveillance imaging strategies using whole-body positron emission tomography (PET) with computed tomography (CT) (PET/CT) in a follow-up program for adults with resected stage III melanoma.Entities:
Keywords: cost-benefit analysis; decision support techniques; diagnostic imaging; follow-up; melanoma
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35206519 PMCID: PMC8872338 DOI: 10.3390/ijerph19042331
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Environ Res Public Health ISSN: 1660-4601 Impact factor: 3.390
Figure 1Decision model structure.
Characteristic and resource use of the people included in the study by imaging schedule.
| Characteristics | Imaging Schedule | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 3–4 Monthly | 6-Monthly | 12-Monthly | No-Imaging | Total | |
| Total: N (%) | 146 (18%) | 47 (6%) | 284 (35%) | 346 (42%) | 823 (100%) |
| Gender: N (%) | |||||
| Male | 91 (11%) | 33 (4%) | 181 (22%) | 230 (28%) | 535 (65%) |
| Age at Diagnosis: Mean (SD) | 59 (14.19) | 54 (13.68) | 52 (14.70) | 61 (16.71) | 57 (15.94) |
| Age at Diagnosis: Median (IQR) | 60 (49–69) | 55 (44–64) | 53 (42–62) | 62 (50–74) | 58 (46–69) |
| Site of Primary: N (%) | |||||
| Head and Neck | 22 (15%) | 9 (19%) | 43 (15%) | 69 (20%) | 143 (17%) |
| Trunk | 38 (26%) | 12 (26%) | 102 (36%) | 91 (26%) | 243 (30%) |
| Upper Limbs | 13 (9%) | 4 (9%) | 33 (12%) | 30 (9%) | 80 (10%) |
| Lower Limbs | 28 (19%) | 12 (25%) | 72 (25%) | 60 (17%) | 172 (21%) |
| Occult | 45 (31%) | 10 (21%) | 34 (12%) | 95 (27%) | 184 (22%) |
| Other | 1 (0.3%) | 1 (0.1%) | |||
| AJCC Stage: N (%) | |||||
| III | 45 (31%) | 10 (21%) | 35 (12%) | 101 (29%) | 191 (23%) |
| IIIA | 26 (18%) | 12 (26%) | 117 (41%) | 42 (12%) | 197 (24%) |
| IIIB | 39 (27%) | 12 (26%) | 91 (32%) | 74 (21%) | 216 (26%) |
| IIIC | 36 (25%) | 13 (28%) | 41 (14%) | 129 (37%) | 219 (27%) |
| Resource Use | |||||
| Diagnostic Imaging (surveillance) | |||||
| Count | 902 | 172 | 1214 | 2116 | |
| Mean (SD) | 6.3 (3.7) | 3.7 (2.3) | 4.3 (2.4) | ||
| Range | [2–19] | [1–11] | [1–13] | ||
| Extra investigations * | |||||
| Count | 690 | 222 | 960 | 1872 | |
| Mean (SD) | 4.8 (5.5) | 4.7 (4.6) | 3.4 (3.2) | ||
| Range | [0–28] | [0–22] | [0–16] | ||
* No detail on sub staging.
Base-case results for the cost per case of distant melanoma appropriately diagnosed and treated (2020 prices) referencing common baseline.
| Strategy | Mean Cost Per Patient | Incremental Cost | Effectiveness * | Incremental Proportion of Distant Disease Appropriately Diagnosed and Treated * | ICER ** |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| No imaging | 51,149 | 0.8770 | - | - | |
| 12-monthly | 52,160 | 2748 | 0.9181 | 0.0411 | 34,362 |
| 6-monthly | 77,998 | 28,476 | 0.8824 | 0.0054 | Dominated |
| 3 to 4-monthly | 88,387 | 36,860 | 0.8845 | 0.0075 | Dominated *** |
* Proportion of distant recurrence correctly diagnosed and treated; ** ICER: Incremental Cost-Effectiveness Ratio; *** (Over AUD 1 M).
Base case results for the cost per diagnostic error avoided (2020 prices).
| Strategy | Mean Total Cost Per Patient | Incremental Cost (AUD) | Effectiveness | Incremental |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| No imaging follow-up | 1513 | 0.8832 | ||
| 12-monthly imaging | 9084 | 7571 | 0.8503 | −0.0329 |
| 6-monthly imaging | 16,268 | 14,755 | 0.8386 | −0.0446 |
| 3 to 4-monthly imaging | 25,304 | 23,791 | 0.7999 | −0.0833 |
* The proportion of diagnostic error avoided. The negative sign demonstrated the no imaging strategy incurred less diagnostic error.
Figure 2One-way sensitivity analysis (tornado) diagrams for the outcome distant disease accurately diagnosed and treated. This diagram shows the degree to which uncertainty in individual variables affects the ICER. Each bar represents the range of the individual parameter and its impact on the ICER across that range. Bars are arranged in order, with the variable with the biggest impact at the top and the variable with the smallest impact at the bottom. Other parameters also evaluated but without influence on the ICER were surveillance imaging sensitivity, specificity, and the probability of distant recurrence with the no imaging strategy. ICER: Incremental Cost-Effectiveness Ratio. (A) is comparing 12-monthly imaging strategy versus Follow-up without routine imaging strategy. (B) is comparing 6-monthly imaging strategy versus Follow-up without routine imaging strategy. (C) is comparing 3-4-monthly imaging strategy versus Follow-up without routine imaging strategy.
Figure 3Incremental cost and effectiveness of 12-monthly PET-CT over no routine imaging strategy for the outcome of distant disease accurately diagnosed and treated. This scatter plot shows the distribution of 10,000 trials from the Monte Carlo simulation.