| Literature DB >> 36038710 |
Ali Tafazzoli1,2, Scott D Ramsey3, Alissa Shaul4, Ameya Chavan4, Weicheng Ye4, Anuraag R Kansal5, Josh Ofman5, A Mark Fendrick6.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Multi-cancer early detection (MCED) testing could increase detection of cancer at early stages, when survival outcomes are better and treatment costs are lower, but is expected to increase screening costs. This study modeled an MCED test for 19 solid cancers in a US population and estimated the potential value-based price (the maximum price to meet a given willingness to pay) of the MCED test plus current single cancer screening (usual care) compared to usual care alone from a third-party payer perspective over a lifetime horizon.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 36038710 PMCID: PMC9550746 DOI: 10.1007/s40273-022-01181-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Pharmacoeconomics ISSN: 1170-7690 Impact factor: 4.558
Fig. 1Overview of the model structure with an example of stage and time shifting of diagnosed cancers due to a multi-cancer early detection (MCED) test. a *False-positive patients (in asymptomatic/no cancer group) and those misdiagnosed because of a wrong cancer signal origin (in detected cancer group) accrued additional work-up costs and disutilities before being accurately assigned to having cancer or not. b An individual who will be diagnosed with cancer at stage III under usual care (left), may (i) have the same cancer diagnosis with MCED testing, (ii) the cancer detection shifted to stage II and an earlier age, or (iii) the cancer detection shifted to stage I and an even earlier stage. Note: Patients can die from background mortality during the pre-diagnosis phase
Sensitivity analyses
| Key parameter changes | |
|---|---|
| 1 | Compliance lowered to 80%; increased to 100% |
| 2 | Screening age 50–64 years |
| 3 | Screening age 65–79 years; use Medicare costs |
| 4 | Cancer incidence varied ±20% |
| 5 | Sensitivity associated with “other” cancers will be equal to (a) kidney and renal pelvis cancer (i.e., the cancer with the lowest mean sensitivity across all stages) and (b) lung cancer (i.e., the cancer with mid-range mean sensitivity across all stages) |
| 6 | Dwell time will be varied to (a) slow, (b) medium, and (c) fast |
| 7 | False-positive work-up costs varied ±20% |
| 8 | Disutility for false-positive work-ups varied ±50% |
| 9 | Cancer treatment costs varied ±20% |
| 10 | Disutilities due to cancer varied ±50% |
| 11 | Reduction in the difference between cancer survival and background survival by 20% |
| 12 | Lower MCED test sensitivity by 20% |
MCED multi-cancer early detection
Fig. 2Number of patients diagnosed with cancer (overall total and example cancers). Note: The total number of cancers diagnosed by multi-cancer early detection (MCED) plus usual care are higher than those diagnosed by the usual care arm alone as the base case considers overdiagnosis. Overall stage shift represents a combination of cancers that have a substantial stage shift due to MCED (e.g., esophageal) and those with a more modest stage shift (e.g., hormone receptor positive [HR+] breast cancer)
Fig. 3Base-case cost outcomes (lifetime cost per person). MCED multi-cancer early detection. Note: All reported cost outcomes are discounted
Fig. 4Tornado diagram of sensitivity analyses. MCED multi-cancer early detection. Note: Sorting based on the greatest to least variation in change from $100,000/quality-adjusted life-year incremental cost-effectiveness ratio
Fig. 5Results from stepped inclusion scenario analyses (sensitivity and incidence). An anus, Bl bladder, Br- breast HR-, Br+ breast HR+, Ce cervix, CR colon and rectum, Es esophagus, HN head and neck, KR kidney and renal pelvis, LI liver and intrahepatic bile duct, LB lung and bronchus, LM lymphoma, Oth other, Ov ovarian, Pa pancreas, Pr prostate, QALY quality-adjusted life-year, St stomach, Ur urothelial, Ut uterus
| Multi-cancer early detection tests present a potential paradigm shift in screening by simultaneously screening for multiple types of cancer. |
| A hybrid state-transition and decision-tree model was developed to estimate the potential value-based price of annual multi-cancer early detection test plus usual care screening versus usual care alone in US adults aged 50–79 years from a third-party payer perspective. |
| Our findings demonstrated that an earlier diagnosis with multi-cancer early detection resulting from a stage and time shift may lead to improved patient survival, increased quality-adjusted life-years, and lower per-case treatment costs when compared with usual care. |