Yabroff K Robin, Borowski Laurel, Lipscomb Joseph
Health Services and Economics Branch/Applied Research Program, Division of Cancer Control and Population Sciences, National Cancer Institute, 9609 Medical Center Dr, 3E436, Rockville, MD 20850, USA.
J Natl Cancer Inst Monogr. 2013;2013(46):62-78. doi: 10.1093/jncimonographs/lgt001.
Estimates of the costs associated with cancer care are essential both for assessing burden of disease at the population level and for conducting economic evaluations of interventions to prevent, detect, or treat cancer. Comparisons of cancer costs between health systems and across countries can improve understanding of the economic consequences of different health-care policies and programs. We conducted a structured review of the published literature on colorectal cancer (CRC) costs, including direct medical, direct nonmedical (ie, patient and caregiver time, travel), and productivity losses. We used MEDLINE to identify English language articles published between 2000 and 2010 and found 55 studies. The majority were conducted in the United States (52.7%), followed by France (12.7%), Canada (10.9%), the United Kingdom (9.1%), and other countries (9.1%). Almost 90% of studies estimated direct medical costs, but few studies estimated patient or caregiver time costs or productivity losses associated with CRC. Within a country, we found significant heterogeneity across the studies in populations examined, health-care delivery settings, methods for identifying incident and prevalent patients, types of medical services included, and analyses. Consequently, findings from studies with seemingly the same objective (eg, costs of chemotherapy in year following CRC diagnosis) are difficult to compare. Across countries, aggregate and patient-level estimates vary in so many respects that they are almost impossible to compare. Our findings suggest that valid cost comparisons should be based on studies with explicit standardization of populations, services, measures of costs, and methods with the goal of comparability within or between health systems or countries. Expected increases in CRC prevalence and costs in the future highlight the importance of such studies for informing health-care policy and program planning.
估算癌症治疗相关成本,对于评估人群层面的疾病负担以及对预防、检测或治疗癌症的干预措施进行经济评估而言都至关重要。比较不同卫生系统之间以及不同国家之间的癌症成本,有助于更好地理解不同医疗保健政策和项目的经济后果。我们对已发表的关于结直肠癌(CRC)成本的文献进行了结构化综述,包括直接医疗成本、直接非医疗成本(即患者及照料者的时间、交通成本)以及生产力损失。我们使用MEDLINE数据库检索2000年至2010年间发表的英文文章,共找到55项研究。其中大多数研究在美国进行(52.7%),其次是法国(12.7%)、加拿大(10.9%)、英国(9.1%)以及其他国家(9.1%)。几乎90%的研究估算了直接医疗成本,但很少有研究估算与CRC相关的患者或照料者时间成本或生产力损失。在一个国家内部,我们发现不同研究在研究人群、医疗服务提供环境、确定新发病例和现患病例的方法、所包含的医疗服务类型以及分析方法等方面存在显著差异。因此,看似目标相同的研究结果(例如CRC诊断后一年的化疗成本)很难进行比较。在不同国家之间,总体和患者层面的估算在诸多方面存在差异,几乎无法进行比较。我们的研究结果表明,有效的成本比较应基于对人群、服务、成本衡量方法以及研究方法进行明确标准化的研究,目标是在卫生系统内部或不同国家之间实现可比性。未来CRC患病率和成本预计会增加,这凸显了此类研究对于为医疗保健政策和项目规划提供信息的重要性。