4.6 Article

An Economic Evaluation of Colorectal Cancer Screening in Primary Care Practice

Journal

AMERICAN JOURNAL OF PREVENTIVE MEDICINE
Volume 48, Issue 6, Pages 714-721

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE INC
DOI: 10.1016/j.amepre.2014.12.016

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Funding

  1. National Cancer Institute (NCI) of the NIH [R01 CA121125]

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Introduction: Recent colorectal cancer screening studies focus on optimizing adherence. This study evaluated the cost effectiveness of interventions using electronic health records (EHRs); automated mailings; and stepped support increases to improve 2-year colorectal cancer screening adherence. Methods: Analyses were based on a parallel-design, randomized trial in which three stepped interventions (EHR-linked mailings [automated]; automated plus telephone assistance [assisted]; or automated and assisted plus nurse navigation to testing completion or refusal [navigated]) were compared to usual care. Data were from August 2008 to November 2011, with analyses performed during 2012-2013. Implementation resources were micro-costed; research and registry development costs were excluded. Incremental cost-effectiveness ratios (ICERs) were based on number of participants current for screening per guidelines over 2 years. Bootstrapping examined robustness of results. Results: Intervention delivery cost per participant current for screening ranged from $21 (automated) to $27 (navigated). Inclusion of induced testing costs (e.g., screening colonoscopy) lowered expenditures for automated (ICER = -$159) and assisted (ICER = -$36) relative to usual care over 2 years. Savings arose from increased fecal occult blood testing, substituting for more expensive colonoscopies in usual care. Results were broadly consistent across demographic subgroups. More intensive interventions were consistently likely to be cost effective relative to less intensive interventions, with willingness to pay values of $600-$1,200 for an additional person current for screening yielding >= 80% probability of cost effectiveness. Conclusions: Two-year cost effectiveness of a stepped approach to colorectal cancer screening promotion based on EHR data is indicated, but longer-term cost effectiveness requires further study. (C) 2015 American Journal of Preventive Medicine

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