Abstract

We conducted an updated economic evaluation, from a healthcare system perspective, to compare the relative effectiveness and efficiency of eight Lynch syndrome (LS) screening protocols among newly diagnosed colorectal cancer (CRC) patients. We developed decision analytic models for a hypothetical cohort of 1000 patients. Model assumptions and parameter values were based on literature and expert opinion. All costs were in 2018 USD. For identifying LS cases, the direct germline sequencing (DGS) protocol provided the best performance (sensitivity 99.90%, 99.57–99.93%; specificity 99.50%, 97.28–99.85%), followed by the tumor sequencing to germline sequencing (TSGS) protocol (sensitivity, 99.42%, 96.55–99.63%; specificity, 96.58%, 96.46–96.60%). The immunohistochemistry (IHC) protocol was most efficient at $20,082 per LS case identified, compared to microsatellite instability (MSI) ($22,988), DGS ($31,365), and TSGS ($104,394) protocols. Adding double-somatic testing to IHC and MSI protocols did not change sensitivity and specificity, increased costs by 6% and 3.5%, respectively, but reduced unexplained cases by 70% and 50%, respectively. DGS would be as efficient as the IHC protocol when the cost of germline sequencing declines under $368 indicating DGS could be an efficient option in the near future. Until then, IHC and MSI protocols with double-somatic testing would be the optimal choices.

Highlights

  • We reported the number of unexplained defective mismatch repair (dMMR) cases

  • The models were developed to support further discussion about which protocol is most appropriate for implementation in healthcare systems for Lynch syndrome (LS) case identification based on new evidence

  • Instead of reporting traditional incremental cost-effectiveness ratios in economic evaluation modeling which can be difficult to interpret by decision-makers [11], our model enabled examination of detailed outcome metrics including effectiveness, cost, and efficiency that were deemed important and easy to interpret for healthcare system decision-making based on our prior studies [11,29]

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Summary

Introduction

Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland.Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/ 4.0/).Precision medicine aims to improve individual health outcomes by tailoring healthcare based on genomic and all other relevant information [1]. One example is universal colorectal cancer (CRC) tumor screening for Lynch syndrome (LS) [2,3]. In the UnitedStates, CRC is the second leading cause of cancer deaths and about 148,000 new cases of CRC are expected to be diagnosed in 2020 [4]. LS is the most common form of inherited

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