| Literature DB >> 35253285 |
João Pedro Bandovas1, Beatriz Leal2, Catarina Reis-de-Carvalho3, David Cordeiro Sousa4,5, João Cruz Araújo6, Pedro Peixoto7, Susana Oliveira Henriques8, António Vaz Carneiro9.
Abstract
Medical overuse-defined as the provision of health services for which potential harms exceed potential benefits-constitutes a paradigm of low-value care and is seen as a threat to the quality of care. Value in healthcare implies a precise definition of disease. However, defining a disease may not be straightforward since clinical data do not show discrete boundaries, calling for some clinical judgment. And, if in time a redefinition of disease is needed, it is important to recognize that it can induce overdiagnosis, the identification of medical conditions that would, otherwise, never cause any significant symptoms or lead to clinical harm. A classic example is the impact of recommendations from professional societies in the late 1990s, lowering the threshold for abnormal total cholesterol from 240 mg/dl to 200 mg/dl. Due to these changes in risk factor definition, literally overnight there were 42 million new cases eligible for treatment in the United States. The same happened with hypertension-using either the 2019 NICE guidelines or the 2018 ESC/ECC guidelines criteria for arterial hypertension, the proportion of people overdiagnosed with hypertension was calculated to be between 14% and 33%. In this review, we will start by discussing resource overuse. We then present the basis for disease definition and its conceptual problems. Finally, we will discuss the impact of changing risk factor/disease definitions in the prevalence of disease and its consequences in overdiagnosis and overtreatment (a problem particularly relevant when definitions are widened to include earlier or milder disease).Entities:
Keywords: changing risk factor/disease definitions; disease definition; low-value care; overdiagnosis; overtreatment; resource overuse
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35253285 PMCID: PMC9314822 DOI: 10.1111/joim.13465
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Intern Med ISSN: 0954-6820 Impact factor: 13.068
Identified prevalence of autism spectrum disorder (Autism and Developmental Disabilities Monitoring [ADDM] criteria)
| Surveillance year | Combined prevalence per 1000 children (range across ADDM sites) | Absolute risk (e.g., 1 in X children) |
|---|---|---|
| 2000 | 6.7 (4.5–9.9) | 1 in 150 |
| 2004 | 8.0 (4.6–9.8) | 1 in 125 |
| 2008 | 11.3 (4.8–21.2) | 1 in 88 |
| 2012 | 14.5 (8.2–24.6) | 1 in 69 |
| 2016 | 18.5 (18.0–19.1) | 1 in 54 |
Fig. 1Thyroid‐cancer incidence and related mortality in South Korea, 1993–2011 [12] (in process of obtaining a license for republication permissions, through the Copyright Clearance Center [CCC]).
Fig. 2Baseline risk and efficacy of treatment [32] (in process of obtaining a license for republication permissions, through the Copyright Clearance Center [CCC]).
Influence of disease definitions in prevalence of disease
| Disease/risk factor | What has changed? | What was the consequence? |
|---|---|---|
| Autism | Definition, including more features and subpopulations | Increase in prevalence by 176% |
| Thyroid cancer | Improvement in diagnostic tools | 2.4‐Fold increase of prevalence in the United States; no difference in mortality |
| Screening program in South Korea from 1999 to 2008 | 15‐Fold increase in incidence of papillary thyroid cancer; no difference in mortality | |
| Osteoporosis | Definition on National Osteoporosis Foundation (USA) 2008 guideline | Increase in prevalence from 21% to 72% |
| Myocardial infarction | Definition on European Society of Cardiology/American College of Cardiology 2000 criteria | Increase in prevalence from 18% to 29% |
| Prediabetes | Definition with lowering cut‐off levels for fasting glucose or glycated haemoglobin | Increase in prevalence from 26% to 50% in China; increase in prevalence from 26% to 31% in the United States |
| Breast and prostate cancer | Screening programs worldwide | Increase in prevalence overall; no difference in mortality |
| Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease | Definition solely based on forced expiratory volume in 1 second/FVC ratio on GOLD guidelines | Twofold increase in prevalence in England and Wales; apparent increase in cardiovascular mortality of patients diagnosed by the new criteria but not by the old one |
Abbreviation: FVC, forced vital capacity.
Fig. 3Lead time affects survival time after screening.