Abstract
11051 Background: Cancer screening can decrease cancer incidence, mortality, and treatment costs. However, the annual cost of screening to the U.S. healthcare system is unknown. Methods: We used data from national healthcare surveys and standard costing sources to model the healthcare system cost of breast, cervical, colorectal, lung, and prostate cancer screening in the U.S. in 2021. Models projected the number of individuals in the U.S. eligible for each screening test based on current guidelines/recommendations; the number of eligible individuals screened by insurance status; and the costs associated with screening (in 2021 US dollars). Multiple sensitivity analyses were performed to examine the effects of changing model population parameters and costs on projected outcomes. Results: Total 2021 cancer screening costs to the U.S. healthcare system were estimated to be $57 billion; approximately 88% of the costs were attributable to private insurance, 9% to Medicare, and 3% to Medicaid, other government programs, and uninsured individuals. Most screened individuals had private insurance except for lung cancer screening, where a majority of individuals screened had Medicare coverage. Individuals with private insurance accounted for the majority of costs for each screening modality. Screening for colorectal cancer represented approximately two-thirds of the total cost; screening colonoscopy was approximately 60% of the total cost of cancer screening. Breast and cervical cancer screening represented the second and third largest screening costs, 15.4% and 14.7% (respectively) of total screening costs. Facility costs (amounts paid to facilities where testing occurred) were generally larger components of the total estimated costs of screening than were physician costs. Cost estimates were robust to a range of variations in eligible populations and screening costs. Conclusions: The $57 billion estimated annual cost for cancer screening in the U.S. in 2021 is similar to the estimated annual cost of cancer treatment in the U.S. in the first 12 months following diagnosis. Screening may have been suboptimal in 2021, with higher screening rates and costs in subsequent years. Identification of cancer screening costs and their drivers is critical to help inform policy and develop programmatic priorities. The model can be used to estimate the increased costs of enhanced access to recommended cancer screening services among underscreened populations, which would provide population-wide benefits.
Published Version
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