The Cost-Effectiveness of High-Risk Lung Cancer Screening and Drivers of Program Efficiency

The Cost-Effectiveness of High-Risk Lung Cancer Screening and Drivers of Program Efficiency

Published: Aug 01, 2017
Publisher: Journal of Thoracic Oncology, vol. 12, no. 8
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Authors

Sonya Cressman

Stuart J. Peacock

Martin C. Tammemägi

William K. Evans

Natasha B. Leighl

John R. Goffin

Alain Tremblay

Geoffrey Liu

Daria Manos

Paul MacEachern

Rick Bhatia

Serge Puksa

Garth Nicholas

Annette McWilliams

John R. Mayo

John Yee

John C. English

Reka Pataky

Emily McPherson

Sukhinder Atkar-Khattra

Michael R. Johnston

Heidi Schmidt

Frances A. Shepherd

Kam Soghrati

Kayvan Amjadi

Paul Burrowes

Christian Couture

Harmanjatinder S. Sekhon

Kazuhiro Yasufuku

Glenwood Goss

Diana N. Ionescu

David M. Hwang

Simon Martel

Don D. Sin

Wan C. Tan

Stefan Urbanski

Zhaolin Xu

Ming-Sound Tsao

Stephen Lam

Lung cancer risk prediction models have the potential to make programs more affordable; however, the economic evidence is limited.

Participants in the National Lung Cancer Screening Trial (NLST) were retrospectively identified with the risk prediction tool developed from the Prostate, Lung, Colorectal and Ovarian Cancer Screening Trial. The high-risk subgroup was assessed for lung cancer incidence and demographic characteristics compared with those in the low-risk subgroup and the Pan-Canadian Early Detection of Lung Cancer Study (PanCan), which is an observational study that was high-risk–selected in Canada. A comparison of high-risk screening versus standard care was made with a decision-analytic model using data from the NLST with Canadian cost data from screening and treatment in the PanCan study. Probabilistic and deterministic sensitivity analyses were undertaken to assess uncertainty and identify drivers of program efficiency.

Use of the risk prediction tool developed from the Prostate, Lung, Colorectal and Ovarian Cancer Screening Trial with a threshold set at 2% over 6 years would have reduced the number of individuals who needed to be screened in the NLST by 81%. High-risk screening participants in the NLST had more adverse demographic characteristics than their counterparts in the PanCan study. High-risk screening would cost $20,724 (in 2015 Canadian dollars) per quality-adjusted life-year gained and would be considered cost-effective at a willingness-to-pay threshold of $100,000 in Canadian dollars per quality-adjusted life-year gained with a probability of 0.62. Cost-effectiveness was driven primarily by non–lung cancer outcomes. Higher noncurative drug costs or current costs for immunotherapy and targeted therapies in the United States would render lung cancer screening a cost-saving intervention.

Non–lung cancer outcomes drive screening efficiency in diverse, tobacco-exposed populations. Use of risk selection can reduce the budget impact, and screening may even offer cost savings if noncurative treatment costs continue to rise.

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