Harvard Radiation Oncology Program, Boston, Massachusetts.
Departments of Radiology and Epidemiology, Erasmus Medical Center, Rotterdam, the Netherlands and Center for Health Decision Science, Harvard School of Public Health, Boston, Massachusetts.
Int J Radiat Oncol Biol Phys. 2014 Oct 1;90(2):344-53. doi: 10.1016/j.ijrobp.2014.06.013. Epub 2014 Aug 4.
Hodgkin lymphoma (HL) survivors face an increased risk of treatment-related lung cancer. Screening with low-dose computed tomography (LDCT) may allow detection of early stage, resectable cancers. We developed a Markov decision-analytic and cost-effectiveness model to estimate the merits of annual LDCT screening among HL survivors.
Population databases and HL-specific literature informed key model parameters, including lung cancer rates and stage distribution, cause-specific survival estimates, and utilities. Relative risks accounted for radiation therapy (RT) technique, smoking status (>10 pack-years or current smokers vs not), age at HL diagnosis, time from HL treatment, and excess radiation from LDCTs. LDCT assumptions, including expected stage-shift, false-positive rates, and likely additional workup were derived from the National Lung Screening Trial and preliminary results from an internal phase 2 protocol that performed annual LDCTs in 53 HL survivors. We assumed a 3% discount rate and a willingness-to-pay (WTP) threshold of $50,000 per quality-adjusted life year (QALY).
Annual LDCT screening was cost effective for all smokers. A male smoker treated with mantle RT at age 25 achieved maximum QALYs by initiating screening 12 years post-HL, with a life expectancy benefit of 2.1 months and an incremental cost of $34,841/QALY. Among nonsmokers, annual screening produced a QALY benefit in some cases, but the incremental cost was not below the WTP threshold for any patient subsets. As age at HL diagnosis increased, earlier initiation of screening improved outcomes. Sensitivity analyses revealed that the model was most sensitive to the lung cancer incidence and mortality rates and expected stage-shift from screening.
HL survivors are an important high-risk population that may benefit from screening, especially those treated in the past with large radiation fields including mantle or involved-field RT. Screening may be cost effective for all smokers but possibly not for nonsmokers despite a small life expectancy benefit.
霍奇金淋巴瘤(HL)幸存者面临治疗相关肺癌的风险增加。低剂量计算机断层扫描(LDCT)筛查可能有助于发现早期可切除的癌症。我们开发了一种马尔可夫决策分析和成本效益模型,以估计 HL 幸存者中进行年度 LDCT 筛查的优点。
人群数据库和 HL 特定文献为关键模型参数提供了信息,包括肺癌发生率和分期分布、特定原因的生存估计值和效用。相对风险考虑了放射治疗(RT)技术、吸烟状况(>10 包年或当前吸烟者与不吸烟者)、HL 诊断时的年龄、HL 治疗后时间以及 LDCT 产生的额外辐射。LDCT 假设,包括预期的分期转移、假阳性率以及可能的额外检查,源自国家肺癌筛查试验和内部 2 期方案的初步结果,该方案对 53 名 HL 幸存者进行了年度 LDCT。我们假设贴现率为 3%,愿意支付(WTP)阈值为每质量调整生命年(QALY)50,000 美元。
对于所有吸烟者,年度 LDCT 筛查均具有成本效益。一名 25 岁接受斗篷 RT 治疗的男性吸烟者在 HL 后 12 年开始筛查可实现最大 QALY,其预期寿命获益为 2.1 个月,增量成本为 34,841 美元/QALY。在非吸烟者中,年度筛查在某些情况下产生了 QALY 获益,但对于任何患者亚组,增量成本均未低于 WTP 阈值。随着 HL 诊断时年龄的增加,更早开始筛查可改善结果。敏感性分析表明,该模型对肺癌发病率和死亡率以及筛查引起的预期分期转移最为敏感。
HL 幸存者是一个重要的高危人群,可能受益于筛查,尤其是那些过去接受过包括斗篷或累及野 RT 等大辐射野治疗的患者。筛查对所有吸烟者可能具有成本效益,但对于非吸烟者则可能没有,尽管预期寿命获益较小。