1. Resource utilization and costs during the initial years of lung cancer screening with computed tomography in Canada
- Author
-
Alain Tremblay, Christian Couture, John R. Goffin, Paul MacEachern, Zhaolin Xu, Annette McWilliams, Dean A. Regier, Garth Nicholas, Kayvan Amjadi, Frances A. Shepherd, William K. Evans, Paul Burrowes, Ian Cromwell, Jean M. Seely, Glenwood D. Goss, Michael R. Johnston, Rick Bhatia, John Yee, Martin C. Tammemägi, Richard J. Finley, Serge Puksa, Heidi C. Roberts, Ming-Sound Tsao, John R. Mayo, Sonya Cressman, Stephen Lam, Simon Martel, Natasha B. Leighl, Corneliu Bolbocean, Kazuhiro Yasufuku, Stefan J. Urbanski, S. Atkar-Khattra, Harmanjatinder S. Sekhon, Diana N. Ionescu, Stuart Peacock, Daria Manos, Geoffrey Liu, Wan C. Tan, Don D. Sin, Kamyar Soghrati, John C. English, David M. Hwang, Jean-Claude Cutz, and Team, Pan-Canadian Early Detection of Lung Cancer
- Subjects
Pulmonary and Respiratory Medicine ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Canada ,Lung Neoplasms ,Cost effectiveness ,Cost-Benefit Analysis ,Population ,Treatment of lung cancer ,Lung cancer screening ,medicine ,Cost analysis ,Humans ,Mass Screening ,Lung cancer ,education ,Mass screening ,Average cost ,Early Detection of Cancer ,Randomized Controlled Trials as Topic ,education.field_of_study ,business.industry ,Cancer ,Original Articles ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Surgery ,Oncology ,Emergency medicine ,Screening ,Female ,Cost-effectiveness ,business ,Tomography, X-Ray Computed - Abstract
Background It is estimated that millions of North Americans would qualify for lung cancer screening and that billions of dollars of national health expenditures would be required to support population-based computed tomography lung cancer screening programs. The decision to implement such programs should be informed by data on resource utilization and costs. Methods Resource utilization data were collected prospectively from 2059 participants in the Pan-Canadian Early Detection of Lung Cancer Study using low-dose computed tomography (LDCT). Participants who had 2% or greater lung cancer risk over 3 years using a risk prediction tool were recruited from seven major cities across Canada. A cost analysis was conducted from the Canadian public payer's perspective for resources that were used for the screening and treatment of lung cancer in the initial years of the study. Results The average per-person cost for screening individuals with LDCT was USD453 (95% confidence interval [CI], USD400–USD505) for the initial 18-months of screening following a baseline scan. The screening costs were highly dependent on the detected lung nodule size, presence of cancer, screening intervention, and the screening center. The mean per-person cost of treating lung cancer with curative surgery was USD33,344 (95% CI, USD31,553–USD34,935) over 2 years. This was lower than the cost of treating advanced-stage lung cancer with chemotherapy, radiotherapy, or supportive care alone, (USD47,792; 95% CI, USD43,254–USD52,200; p = 0.061). Conclusion In the Pan-Canadian study, the average cost to screen individuals with a high risk for developing lung cancer using LDCT and the average initial cost of curative intent treatment were lower than the average per-person cost of treating advanced stage lung cancer which infrequently results in a cure.
- Published
- 2022