Abstract
Background and AimsCurrent gastric cancer (GC) screening modalities are invasive and expensive. Noninvasive screening for GC precursors with serum pepsinogen (PG) may improve early detection and prevention. Test characteristics of PG based on US prospective data was recently reported and used to study the cost-effectiveness of PG screening versus no screening in the US. MethodsA patient-level state transition microsimulation of gastric adenocarcinoma analyzed noninvasive screening versus no screening in a hypothetical cohort of average risk US individuals. Primary outcomes included life expectancy, quality-adjusted life years (QALYs), total costs, and incremental cost-effectiveness ratios (ICERs). Secondary outcomes included total GC incidence and mortality. Base-case PG sensitivity and specificity were 34.1% and 94.7%, respectively, with a wide range of PG performance characteristics also examined. ResultsOne-time serum PG screening at age 40 was cost-effective compared to no screening with an ICER of $4,913.29 per QALY. PG screening resulted in 10.9% relative reduction in lifetime GC incidence and 10.8% relative decrease in cumulative GC mortality. Localized stage at diagnosis increased from 30.5% to 33.6% and metastatic stage decreased from 40.8% to 37.4%. Sensitivity analysis showed PG screening was most sensitive to endoscopy costs, chronic atrophic gastritis quality of life, and PG prevalence. PG screening remained cost-effective across a wide range of test values. ConclusionPG screening is a cost-effective strategy to improve GC mortality, however, mortality benefit will depend on the test characteristics of the biomarker. Future blood-based screening tests that have better performance characteristics could further improve GC prevention.
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