4.3 Article

Cost-effectiveness evaluation of mammography screening program in Taiwan: Adjusting different distributions of age and calendar year for real world data

Journal

JOURNAL OF THE FORMOSAN MEDICAL ASSOCIATION
Volume 121, Issue 3, Pages 633-642

Publisher

ELSEVIER TAIWAN
DOI: 10.1016/j.jfma.2021.06.013

Keywords

Breast neoplasms; Survival; Health expenditures; Life expectancy; Loss-of-life expectancy

Funding

  1. Ministry of Science and Technology (MOST), Taiwan government grant MOST [108-2627M-006-001, MOST109-2621-M006-007]

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This study evaluates the cost-effectiveness of breast cancer screening in Taiwan by estimating loss-of-life expectancy and lifetime medical expenditures. The results show that mammography can detect breast cancer early and be cost-saving after adjusting for different age and diagnosis time distributions.
Background/Purpose: We estimated loss-of-life expectancy (LE) and lifetime medical expenditures (LME) stratified by stages to evaluate the cost-effectiveness of breast cancer (BC) screening in Taiwan. Methods: We interlinked four national databases-Cancer Registry, Mortality Registry, National Health Insurance Claim, and Mammography Screening. A cohort of 123,221 BC was identified during 2002-2015 and followed until December 31, 2017. We estimated LE and loss-of-LE by rolling extrapolation algorithm using age-, sex-, and calendar-year-matched referents simulated from vital statistics. LME was estimated by multiplying monthly cost with survival probability and adjusted for annual discount rate. We calculated incremental cost-effectiveness ratio (ICER) by comparing the loss-of-LE of those detected by screening versus non-screening after accounting for administration fees and radiation-related excess BC.Results: The LEs of stages I, II, III, and IV were 31.4, 27.2, 20.0, and 5.2 years, respectively, while the loss-of-LE s were 1.2, 4.9, 11.7, and 25.0 years with corresponding LMEs of US$ 73,791, 79,496, 89,962, and 66,981, respectively. The difference in LE between stages I and IV was 26.2 years while that of loss-of-LE was 23.8 years, which implies that a potential lead time bias may exist if diagnosis at younger ages for earlier stages were not adjusted for. The ICER of mammography seemed cost-saving after the coverage exceeded half a million. Conclusion: Mammography could detect BC early and be cost-saving after adjustment for different distributions of age and calendar year of diagnosis. Future studies exploring healthcare expenditure and impaired quality of life for false-positive cases are warranted.Copyright (c) 2021, Formosan Medical Association. Published by Elsevier Taiwan LLC. This is an open access article under the CC BY-NC-ND license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/bync-nd/4.0/).

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