Abstract

Advancements in our understanding of the causes and correlates of disease mean that we are now able to estimate an individual's level of risk. This, and the ever-increasing need for healthcare interventions to be cost-effective, has led to calls for the introduction of risk-based screening. Risk-based screening would involve the use of information about an individual's risk factors to decide whether or not they should be eligible for screening, or the frequency with which they should be invited to attend screening. Evidence is emerging that targeted screening, towards those at higher risk, can increase the cost-effectiveness of a screening programme. The relationship between individual risk and the cost-effectiveness of screening an individual is implicitly recognised in current population screening programmes in the UK. However, the nature of this relationship, and its implications for cost-effectiveness analysis, has not been presented in the academic literature. In this study we propose that an individual's risk of developing a disease has a consistent and quantifiable relationship with the cost-effectiveness of screening them. We suggest a simple modification to standard methods of cost-effectiveness analysis that enables the incorporation of individual risk. Using numerical examples we demonstrate the nature of the relationship between risk and cost-effectiveness and suggest means of optimising a screening intervention. This can be done either by defining a minimum level of risk for eligibility or by defining the optimal recall period for screening. We suggest that methods of decision modelling could enable such an analysis to be carried out, and that information on individual risk could be used to optimise the cost-effectiveness of population screening programmes.

Highlights

  • It is often the case that the earlier a disease is identified, the greater the effect that treatment can have

  • We suggest that methods of decision modelling could enable such an analysis to be carried out, and that information on individual risk could be used to optimise the cost-effectiveness of population screening programmes

  • In the UK, proposals are in place to implement what we describe here as ‘risk-based screening’; a screening programme based upon an explicitly estimated level of individual risk, calculated using data on all known risk factors [7, 8]

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Summary

29 November 2013

Online at https://mpra.ub.uni-muenchen.de/51799/ MPRA Paper No 51799, posted 29 Nov 2013 19:18 UTC. The relationship between individual risk and cost-effectiveness in screening interventions∗. Christopher James Sampson, MSc [1]† Marilyn James, PhD [1] David Whynes, MLitt [2] November 29, 2013. [1] School of Sociology and Social Policy, University of Nottingham [2] School of Economics, University of Nottingham

Introduction
Screening
Risk-based screening
Risk and cost-effectiveness
Defining the relationship
Optimisation
Policy implications
Ethical issues
Limitations
Conclusion

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