Colorectal Cancer Screening: An Updated Modeling Study for the US Preventive Services Task Force

IMPORTANCE: The US Preventive Services Task Force (USPSTF) is updating its 2016 colorectal cancer screening recommendations. OBJECTIVE: To provide updated model-based estimates of the benefits, burden, and harms of colorectal cancer screening strategies and to identify strategies that may provide an...

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Veröffentlicht in:JAMA : the journal of the American Medical Association 2021-05, Vol.325 (19), p.1998-2011
Hauptverfasser: Knudsen, Amy B, Rutter, Carolyn M, Peterse, Elisabeth F. P, Lietz, Anna P, Seguin, Claudia L, Meester, Reinier G. S, Perdue, Leslie A, Lin, Jennifer S, Siegel, Rebecca L, Doria-Rose, V. Paul, Feuer, Eric J, Zauber, Ann G, Kuntz, Karen M, Lansdorp-Vogelaar, Iris
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:IMPORTANCE: The US Preventive Services Task Force (USPSTF) is updating its 2016 colorectal cancer screening recommendations. OBJECTIVE: To provide updated model-based estimates of the benefits, burden, and harms of colorectal cancer screening strategies and to identify strategies that may provide an efficient balance of life-years gained (LYG) from screening and colonoscopy burden to inform the USPSTF. DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS: Comparative modeling study using 3 microsimulation models of colorectal cancer screening in a hypothetical cohort of 40-year-old US individuals at average risk of colorectal cancer. EXPOSURES: Screening from ages 45, 50, or 55 years to ages 70, 75, 80, or 85 years with fecal immunochemical testing (FIT), multitarget stool DNA testing, flexible sigmoidoscopy alone or with FIT, computed tomography colonography, or colonoscopy. All persons with an abnormal noncolonoscopy screening test result were assumed to undergo follow-up colonoscopy. Screening intervals varied by test. Full adherence with all procedures was assumed. MAIN OUTCOME AND MEASURES: Estimated LYG relative to no screening (benefit), lifetime number of colonoscopies (burden), number of complications from screening (harms), and balance of incremental burden and benefit (efficiency ratios). Efficient strategies were those estimated to require fewer additional colonoscopies per additional LYG relative to other strategies. RESULTS: Estimated LYG from screening strategies ranged from 171 to 381 per 1000 40-year-olds. Lifetime colonoscopy burden ranged from 624 to 6817 per 1000 individuals, and screening complications ranged from 5 to 22 per 1000 individuals. Among the 49 strategies that were efficient options with all 3 models, 41 specified screening beginning at age 45. No single age to end screening was predominant among the efficient strategies, although the additional LYG from continuing screening after age 75 were generally small. With the exception of a 5-year interval for computed tomography colonography, no screening interval predominated among the efficient strategies for each modality. Among the strategies highlighted in the 2016 USPSTF recommendation, lowering the age to begin screening from 50 to 45 years was estimated to result in 22 to 27 additional LYG, 161 to 784 additional colonoscopies, and 0.1 to 2 additional complications per 1000 persons (ranges are across screening strategies, based on mean estimates across models). Assuming full adherence, screen
ISSN:0098-7484
1538-3598
DOI:10.1001/jama.2021.5746