Abstract

BackgroundA national endoscopic screening program for gastric cancer was rolled out in Japan in 2015. We used a microsimulation model to estimate the cost-effectiveness of current screening guidelines and alternative screening strategies in Japan.MethodsWe developed a microsimulation model that simulated a virtual population corresponding to the Japanese population in risk factor profile and life expectancy. We evaluated 15 endoscopic screening scenarios with various starting ages, stopping ages, and screening intervals. The primary outcomes were quality-adjusted life-years (QALYs), costs, and incremental cost-effectiveness ratio. Cost-effective screening strategies were determined using a willingness-to-pay threshold of $50,000 per QALY gained. One-way sensitivity and probabilistic sensitivity analyses were done to explore model uncertainty.ResultsUsing the threshold of $50,000 per QALY, a triennial screening program for individuals aged 50 to 75 years was the cost-effective strategy, with an incremental cost-effectiveness ratio of $45,665. Compared with no endoscopic screening, this strategy is predicted to prevent 63% of gastric cancer mortality and confer 27.2 QALYs gained per 1000 individuals over a lifetime period. Current screening guidelines were not on the cost-effectiveness efficient frontier. The results were robust on one-way sensitivity analyses and probabilistic sensitivity analysis.ConclusionsThis modeling study suggests that the endoscopic screening program in Japan would be cost-effective when implemented between age 50 and 75 years, with the screening repeated every 3 years. These findings underscore the need for further evaluation of the current gastric cancer screening recommendations.

Highlights

  • A national endoscopic screening program for gastric cancer was rolled out in Japan in 2015

  • We developed a population-based microsimulation model of gastric cancer and created a virtual population with individual risk profiles and life expectancy which were representative of the population of Japan (Fig. 1)

  • Base case analysis The model estimated that no endoscopic screening resulted in 9.1 gastric cancer mortality, and 47,252 quality-adjusted life-years (QALYs) per 1000 simulated individuals over a lifetime course

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Summary

Introduction

A national endoscopic screening program for gastric cancer was rolled out in Japan in 2015. We used a microsimulation model to estimate the cost-effectiveness of current screening guidelines and alternative screening strategies in Japan. With the thirdhighest rate of gastric cancer incidence globally [3], Japan introduced a national endoscopic screening program in 2015, offering biennial and triennial endoscopic screening for people older than 50 years [4]. Understanding the trade-offs in lifetime benefits and costs of current screening guidelines, as opposed to alternative screening strategies, at the population level is a vital input into dialogues on cancer control policy. To identify which strategies might deliver costeffective care, we developed a microsimulation model which incorporates the best available data to estimate the lifetime cost-effectiveness of various national endoscopic screening scenarios while accounting for individual-level heterogeneity in gastric cancer risk

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