Rao Karthik, Liang Stella, Cardamone Michael, Joshu Corinne E, Marmen Kyle, Bhavsar Nrupen, Nelson William G, Ballentine Carter H, Albert Michael C, Platz Elizabeth A, Pollack Craig E
Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Baltimore, MD, USA.
Financial Analysis Unit, Johns Hopkins Health System, Baltimore, MD, USA.
BMC Urol. 2018 May 9;18(1):38. doi: 10.1186/s12894-018-0344-5.
Multiple guidelines seek to alter rates of prostate-specific antigen (PSA)-based prostate cancer screening. The costs borne by payers associated with PSA-based screening for men of different age groups-including the costs of screening and subsequent diagnosis, treatment, and adverse events-remain uncertain. We sought to develop a model of PSA costs that could be used by payers and health care systems to inform cost considerations under a range of different scenarios.
We determined the prevalence of PSA screening among men aged 50 and higher using 2013-2014 data from a large, multispecialty group, obtained reimbursed costs associated with screening, diagnosis, and treatment from a commercial health plan, and identified transition probabilities for biopsy, diagnosis, treatment, and complications from the literature to generate a cost model. We estimated annual total costs for groups of men ages 50-54, 55-69, and 70+ years, and varied annual prostate cancer screening prevalence in each group from 5 to 50% and tested hypothetical examples of different test characteristics (e.g., true/false positive rate).
Under the baseline screening patterns, costs of the PSA screening represented 10.1% of the total costs; costs of biopsies and associated complications were 23.3% of total costs; and, although only 0.3% of all screen eligible patients were treated, they accounted for 66.7% of total costs. For each 5-percentage point decrease in PSA screening among men aged 70 and older for a single calendar year, total costs associated with prostate cancer screening decreased by 13.8%. For each 5-percentage point decrease in PSA screening among men 50-54 and 55-69 years old, costs were 2.3% and 7.3% lower respectively.
With constrained financial resources and with national pressure to decrease use of clinically unnecessary PSA-based prostate cancer screening, there is an opportunity for cost savings, especially by focusing on the downstream costs disproportionately associated with screening men 70 and older.
多项指南试图改变基于前列腺特异性抗原(PSA)的前列腺癌筛查率。不同年龄组男性基于PSA筛查所产生的费用,包括筛查、后续诊断、治疗及不良事件的费用,仍不明确。我们试图建立一个PSA费用模型,供支付方和医疗保健系统在一系列不同情况下用于成本考量。
我们使用来自一个大型多专科群体2013 - 2014年的数据,确定50岁及以上男性中PSA筛查的患病率,从商业健康保险计划获取与筛查、诊断和治疗相关的报销费用,并从文献中确定活检、诊断、治疗及并发症的转移概率,以生成成本模型。我们估算了50 - 54岁、55 - 69岁和70岁及以上男性群体的年度总成本,并将每组的年度前列腺癌筛查患病率从5%变化到50%,并测试不同检测特征(如真/假阳性率)的假设示例。
在基线筛查模式下,PSA筛查费用占总成本的10.1%;活检及相关并发症的费用占总成本的23.3%;尽管所有符合筛查条件的患者中只有0.3%接受了治疗,但他们占总成本的66.7%。在单一日历年内,70岁及以上男性的PSA筛查率每降低5个百分点,与前列腺癌筛查相关的总成本下降13.8%。50 - 54岁和55 - 69岁男性的PSA筛查率每降低5个百分点,成本分别降低2.3%和7.3%。
在财政资源有限且国家要求减少临床上不必要的基于PSA的前列腺癌筛查使用的情况下,存在节省成本的机会,特别是通过关注与70岁及以上男性筛查不成比例相关的下游成本。