Han Summer S, Ten Haaf Kevin, Hazelton William D, Munshi Vidit N, Jeon Jihyoun, Erdogan Saadet A, Johanson Colden, McMahon Pamela M, Meza Rafael, Kong Chung Yin, Feuer Eric J, de Koning Harry J, Plevritis Sylvia K
Department of Medicine, Stanford University, Palo Alto, CA.
Department of Radiology, Stanford University, Palo Alto, CA.
Int J Cancer. 2017 Jun 1;140(11):2436-2443. doi: 10.1002/ijc.30602.
The U.S. Preventive Services Task Force (USPSTF) recently updated their national lung screening guidelines and recommended low-dose computed tomography (LDCT) for lung cancer (LC) screening through age 80. However, the risk of overdiagnosis among older populations is a concern. Using four comparative models from the Cancer Intervention and Surveillance Modeling Network, we evaluate the overdiagnosis of the screening program recommended by USPSTF in the U.S. 1950 birth cohort. We estimate the number of LC deaths averted by screening (D) per overdiagnosed case (O), yielding the ratio D/O, to quantify the trade-off between the harms and benefits of LDCT. We analyze 576 hypothetical screening strategies that vary by age, smoking, and screening frequency and evaluate efficient screening strategies that maximize the D/O ratio and other metrics including D and life-years gained (LYG) per overdiagnosed case. The estimated D/O ratio for the USPSTF screening program is 2.85 (model range: 1.5-4.5) in the 1950 birth cohort, implying LDCT can prevent ∼3 LC deaths per overdiagnosed case. This D/O ratio increases by 22% when the program stops screening at an earlier age 75 instead of 80. Efficiency frontier analysis shows that while the most efficient screening strategies that maximize the mortality reduction (D) irrespective of overdiagnosis screen through age 80, screening strategies that stop at age 75 versus 80 produce greater efficiency in increasing life-years gained per overdiagnosed case. Given the risk of overdiagnosis with LC screening, the stopping age of screening merits further consideration when balancing benefits and harms.
美国预防服务工作组(USPSTF)最近更新了其全国肺癌筛查指南,建议对80岁及以下人群进行低剂量计算机断层扫描(LDCT)肺癌筛查。然而,老年人群中过度诊断的风险令人担忧。我们使用癌症干预和监测建模网络的四个比较模型,评估了USPSTF在美国1950年出生队列中推荐的筛查项目的过度诊断情况。我们估计每例过度诊断病例(O)通过筛查避免的肺癌死亡人数(D),得出D/O比值,以量化LDCT利弊之间的权衡。我们分析了576种假设的筛查策略,这些策略因年龄、吸烟情况和筛查频率而异,并评估了能使D/O比值以及包括每例过度诊断病例的D和获得的生命年数(LYG)等其他指标最大化的高效筛查策略。在1950年出生队列中,USPSTF筛查项目的估计D/O比值为2.85(模型范围:1.5 - 4.5),这意味着LDCT每诊断出一例过度诊断病例可预防约3例肺癌死亡。当该项目在75岁而非80岁提前停止筛查时,这个D/O比值会增加22%。效率前沿分析表明,虽然不考虑过度诊断时使死亡率降低(D)最大化的最有效筛查策略是对80岁及以下人群进行筛查,但在75岁而非80岁停止筛查的策略在每例过度诊断病例增加获得的生命年数方面产生更高的效率。鉴于肺癌筛查存在过度诊断的风险,在权衡利弊时,筛查的停止年龄值得进一步考虑。