Abstract

BackgroundFollowing the adoption of the Global Action Plan for the Prevention and Control of NCDs 2013–2020, an update to the Appendix 3 of the action plan was requested by Member States in 2016, endorsed by the Seventieth World Health Assembly in May 2017 and provides a list of recommended NCD interventions. The main contribution of this paper is to present results of analyses identifying how decision makers can achieve maximum health gain using the cancer interventions listed in the Appendix 3. We also present methods used to calculate new WHO-CHOICE cost-effectiveness results for breast cancer, cervical cancer, and colorectal cancer in Southeast Asia and eastern sub-Saharan Africa.MethodsWe used “Generalized Cost-Effectiveness Analysis” for our analysis which uses a hypothetical null reference case, where the impacts of all current interventions are removed, in order to identify the optimal package of interventions. All health system costs, regardless of payer, were included. Health outcomes are reported as the gain in healthy life years due to a specific intervention scenario and were estimated using a deterministic state-transition cohort simulation (Markov model).ResultsVaccination against human papillomavirus (two doses) for 9–13-year-old girls (in eastern sub-Saharan Africa) and HPV vaccination combined with prevention of cervical cancer by screening of women aged 30–49 years through visual inspection with acetic acid linked with timely treatment of pre-cancerous lesions (in Southeast Asia) were found to be the most cost effective interventions. For breast cancer, in both regions the treatment of breast cancer, stages I and II, with surgery ± systemic therapy, at 95% coverage, was found to be the most cost-effective intervention. For colorectal cancer, treatment of colorectal cancer, stages I and II, with surgery ± chemotherapy and radiotherapy, at 95% coverage, was found to be the most cost-effective intervention.ConclusionThe results demonstrate that cancer prevention and control interventions are cost-effective and can be implemented through a step-wise approach to achieve maximum health benefits. As the global community moves toward universal health coverage, this analysis can support decision makers in identifying a core package of cancer services, ensuring treatment and palliative care for all.

Highlights

  • Following the adoption of the Global Action Plan for the Prevention and Control of noncommunicable diseases (NCDs) 2013–2020, an update to the Appendix 3 of the action plan was requested by Member States in 2016, endorsed by the Seventieth World Health Assembly in May 2017 and provides a list of recommended NCD interventions

  • Vaccination against human papillomavirus of 9–13-year-old girls and prevention of cervical cancer by screening women aged 30–49 through visual inspection with acetic acid linked with timely treatment of pre-cancerous lesions

  • Vaccination against human papillomavirus of 9–13-year-old girls combined with prevention of cervical cancer by screening women aged 30–49 through visual inspection with acetic acid linked with timely treatment of pre-cancerous lesions (CVC_C1e) at 50% coverage is the most cost-effective intervention in Southeast Asia, with an incremental costeffectiveness of I$ 87 per healthy life years (HLYs) gained

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Summary

Introduction

Following the adoption of the Global Action Plan for the Prevention and Control of NCDs 2013–2020, an update to the Appendix 3 of the action plan was requested by Member States in 2016, endorsed by the Seventieth World Health Assembly in May 2017 and provides a list of recommended NCD interventions. We present methods used to calculate new WHO-CHOICE cost-effectiveness results for breast cancer, cervical cancer, and colorectal cancer in Southeast Asia and eastern subSaharan Africa. While communicable disease deaths have decreased 26% between 2000 and 2015, deaths from cancer have increased 26%, with a significant increased proportion of cancer-related deaths occurring in Asia and Africa [2, 3]. Cervical cancer and breast cancer are the leading causes of cancerrelated death among women in the sub-Saharan Africa region, resulting in, respectively, 23.2% and 19.3% [3] of total cancer deaths; colorectal cancer is one of the most common causes of cancer-related death for both sexes worldwide [3]. The total annual economic costs of cancer globally was estimated at approximately US$ 1.16 trillion in 2010 and has continued to rise, threatening health budgets and economies at all income levels and causing financial catastrophe for individuals and families [3]

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