Abstract

ObjectivesRisk stratification has so far been evaluated under the assumption that women fully adhere to screening recommendations. However, the participation in German cancer screening programs remains low at 54%. The question arises whether risk-stratified screening is economically efficient under the assumption that adherence is not perfect.MethodWe have adapted a micro-simulation Markov model to the German context. Annual, biennial, and triennial routine screening are compared with five risk-adapted strategies using thresholds of relative risk to stratify screening frequencies. We used three outcome variables (mortality reduction, quality-adjusted life years, and false-positive results) under the assumption of full adherence vs. an adherence rate of 54%. Strategies are evaluated using efficiency frontiers and probabilistic sensitivity analysis (PSA).ResultsThe reduced adherence rate affects both performance and cost; incremental cost-effectiveness ratios remain constant. The results of PSA show that risk-stratified screening strategies are more efficient than biennial routine screening under certain conditions. At any willingness-to-pay (WTP), there is a risk-stratified alternative with a higher likelihood of being the best choice. However, without explicit decision criteria and WTP, risk-stratified screening is not more efficient than biennial routine screening. Potential improvements in the adherence rates have significant health gains and budgetary implications.ConclusionIf the participation rate for mammographic screening is as low as in Germany, stratified screening is not clearly more efficient than routine screening but dependent on the WTP. A more promising design for future stratified strategies is the combination of risk stratification mechanisms with interventions to improve the low adherence in selected high-risk groups.

Highlights

  • The results of probabilistic sensitivity analysis (PSA) show that risk-stratified screening strategies are more efficient than biennial routine screening under certain conditions

  • A more promising design for future stratified strategies is the combination of risk stratification mechanisms with interventions to improve the low adherence in selected high-risk groups

  • When evaluating national mammography screening programs, it remains controversial whether the benefits outperform the risks, such as false-positive screening results and unnecessary diagnostic procedures [1,2,3,4]

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Summary

Introduction

When evaluating national mammography screening programs, it remains controversial whether the benefits outperform the risks, such as false-positive screening results and unnecessary diagnostic procedures [1,2,3,4]. It is desirable to avoid unnecessary diagnostic procedures involving radiation in women who are unlikely to develop breast cancer. It is desirable to develop risk-stratified screening intervals based on the individual risk profile, taking into account family history, breast density, and breast biopsies [5,6,7,8]. In our previous work [11], we were able demonstrate that the performance of screening programs is sensitive to changes in the adherence assumption. Incidence of breast cancer in absence of screening. Based on survival curves from Munich Tumor Registry data.

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