Qin Xuanzi, Tangka Florence K L, Guy Gery P, Howard David H
Division of Health Policy and Management, University of Minnesota Twin Cities, Room A369, Mayo Building 420 Delaware St. S.E, Minneapolis, MN, 55455, USA.
Division of Cancer Prevention and Control, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Atlanta, GA, USA.
Cancer Causes Control. 2017 Jan;28(1):41-48. doi: 10.1007/s10552-016-0835-1. Epub 2016 Dec 26.
In 2009, the United States Preventive Services Task Force (USPSTF) recommended against routine mammography screening for women aged 40-49 years. This revised recommendation was widely criticized and has sparked off intense debate. The objectives of this study are to examine the impact of the revised recommendation on the proportion of women receiving mammograms and how the effect varied by age.
We identified women who had continuous health insurance coverage and who did not have breast cancer between 2008 and 2011 in the Truven Health MarketScan Commercial Claims Databases using mammogram procedure codes. Using women aged 50-59 years as a control group, we used a differences-in-differences approach to estimate the impact of the revised recommendation on the proportion of women ages 40-49 years who received at least one mammogram. We also compared the age-specific changes in the proportion of women ages 35-59 years who were screened before and after the release of the revised recommendation.
The proportion of women screened among the 40-49 and 50-59 age groups were 58.5 and 62.5%, respectively, between 2008 and 2009, and 56.9 and 62.0%, respectively, between 2010 and 2011. After 2009, the proportion of women screened declined by 1.2 percentage point among women aged 40-49 years (P < 0.01). The proportion of women screened decreased for all ages, and decreases were larger among women closer to the 40-year threshold.
The 2009 USPSTF breast cancer recommendation was followed by a small reduction in the proportion of insured women aged 40-49 years who were screened. Reductions were larger among women at the younger end of the age range, who presumably had less prior experience with mammography than women nearing 50.
2009年,美国预防服务工作组(USPSTF)建议不对40 - 49岁的女性进行常规乳房X线筛查。这一修订后的建议受到广泛批评,并引发了激烈辩论。本研究的目的是检验修订后的建议对接受乳房X线检查的女性比例的影响,以及这种影响如何随年龄变化。
我们在Truven Health MarketScan商业索赔数据库中,使用乳房X线检查程序代码,识别出在2008年至2011年期间拥有连续医疗保险且未患乳腺癌的女性。以50 - 59岁的女性作为对照组,我们采用双重差分法来估计修订后的建议对40 - 49岁接受至少一次乳房X线检查的女性比例的影响。我们还比较了修订后的建议发布前后35 - 59岁接受筛查的女性比例的年龄特异性变化。
在2008年至2009年期间,40 - 49岁和50 - 59岁年龄组接受筛查的女性比例分别为58.5%和62.5%,在2010年至2011年期间分别为56.9%和62.0%。2009年之后,40 - 49岁女性接受筛查的比例下降了1.2个百分点(P < 0.01)。所有年龄段接受筛查的女性比例均下降,且年龄越接近40岁门槛的女性下降幅度越大。
2009年USPSTF的乳腺癌建议出台后,40 - 49岁参保女性接受筛查的比例略有下降。年龄范围较年轻一端的女性下降幅度更大,她们之前接受乳房X线检查的经验可能比接近50岁的女性少。