Department of Applied Health Research, University College London, London, England.
Department of Radiology, Cambridge Biomedical Campus, University of Cambridge, Cambridge, England.
JAMA Oncol. 2018 Nov 1;4(11):1504-1510. doi: 10.1001/jamaoncol.2018.1901.
The age-based or "one-size-fits-all" breast screening approach does not take into account the individual variation in risk. Mammography screening reduces death from breast cancer at the cost of overdiagnosis. Identifying risk-stratified screening strategies with a more favorable ratio of overdiagnoses to breast cancer deaths prevented would improve the quality of life of women and save resources.
To assess the benefit-to-harm ratio and the cost-effectiveness of risk-stratified breast screening programs compared with a standard age-based screening program and no screening.
DESIGN, SETTING, AND POPULATION: A life-table model was created of a hypothetical cohort of 364 500 women in the United Kingdom, aged 50 years, with follow-up to age 85 years, using (1) findings of the Independent UK Panel on Breast Cancer Screening and (2) risk distribution based on polygenic risk profile. The analysis was undertaken from the National Health Service perspective.
The modeled interventions were (1) no screening, (2) age-based screening (mammography screening every 3 years from age 50 to 69 years), and (3) risk-stratified screening (a proportion of women aged 50 years with a risk score greater than a threshold risk were offered screening every 3 years until age 69 years) considering each percentile of the risk distribution. All analyses took place between July 2016 and September 2017.
Overdiagnoses, breast cancer deaths averted, quality-adjusted life-years (QALYs) gained, costs in British pounds, and net monetary benefit (NMB). Probabilistic sensitivity analyses were used to assess uncertainty around parameter estimates. Future costs and benefits were discounted at 3.5% per year.
The risk-stratified analysis of this life-table model included a hypothetical cohort of 364 500 women followed up from age 50 to 85 years. As the risk threshold was lowered, the incremental cost of the program increased linearly, compared with no screening, with no additional QALYs gained below 35th percentile risk threshold. Of the 3 screening scenarios, the risk-stratified scenario with risk threshold at the 70th percentile had the highest NMB, at a willingness to pay of £20 000 (US $26 800) per QALY gained, with a 72% probability of being cost-effective. Compared with age-based screening, risk-stratified screening at the 32nd percentile vs 70th percentile risk threshold would cost £20 066 (US $26 888) vs £537 985 (US $720 900) less, would have 26.7% vs 71.4% fewer overdiagnoses, and would avert 2.9% vs 9.6% fewer breast cancer deaths, respectively.
Not offering breast cancer screening to women at lower risk could improve the cost-effectiveness of the screening program, reduce overdiagnosis, and maintain the benefits of screening.
基于年龄的或“一刀切”的乳房筛查方法没有考虑到个体风险的差异。乳房 X 光筛查降低了乳腺癌死亡率,但代价是过度诊断。确定风险分层的筛查策略,使其过度诊断与预防的乳腺癌死亡比例更有利,将提高妇女的生活质量并节省资源。
评估风险分层乳房筛查计划与标准年龄筛查计划和不筛查相比的获益-危害比和成本效益。
设计、设置和人群:使用(1)英国独立乳腺癌筛查小组的研究结果和(2)基于多基因风险评分的风险分布,为英国 364500 名 50 岁女性的假设队列创建了一个生命表模型,并进行了随访至 85 岁。分析是从国民保健服务的角度进行的。
模型干预措施包括(1)不筛查、(2)基于年龄的筛查(从 50 岁至 69 岁每 3 年进行一次乳房 X 光筛查)和(3)风险分层筛查(将风险评分大于阈值风险的一部分 50 岁女性每 3 年提供一次筛查,直至 69 岁),考虑到风险分布的每个百分位。所有分析均在 2016 年 7 月至 2017 年 9 月之间进行。
过度诊断、预防的乳腺癌死亡、质量调整生命年(QALY)、英国英镑的成本和净货币收益(NMB)。使用概率敏感性分析来评估参数估计的不确定性。未来的成本和收益按每年 3.5%贴现。
该生命表模型的风险分层分析包括 364500 名女性的假设队列,从 50 岁随访至 85 岁。随着风险阈值的降低,与不筛查相比,该计划的增量成本呈线性增加,而在低于 35 百分位风险阈值的情况下,没有获得额外的 QALY。在 3 种筛查方案中,风险阈值为 70 百分位的风险分层方案具有最高的 NMB,在愿意支付每 QALY 20000 英镑(26800 美元)的情况下,其具有 72%的成本效益概率。与基于年龄的筛查相比,风险分层筛查的 32 百分位与 70 百分位风险阈值相比,将分别节省 20660 英镑(26888 美元)和 537985 英镑(720900 美元)的成本,分别有 26.7%和 71.4%的过度诊断,分别预防 2.9%和 9.6%的乳腺癌死亡。
对低风险女性不进行乳腺癌筛查,可以提高筛查计划的成本效益,减少过度诊断,并保持筛查的益处。