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Assessment of Screening Interventions and Programs

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Title: Assessment of Screening Interventions and Programs


1
Assessment of Screening Interventions and
Programs
2
(No Transcript)
3
Well cover...
  • The general conceptual model epidemiology for
    screening
  • Problems in assessing evidence for effectiveness
    of screening
  • An example Screening for AAA
  • Hot topics in screening--
  • breast cancer screening
  • prostate cancer screening
  • colorectal cancer screening

4
My copy shown here is pretty beat up... but still
an excellent reference for general epidemiology
of screening AS Morrison Screening in Chronic
Disease Oxford University Press, 1985.
5
Other references
  • Report of US Preventive Services Task Force.
    Guide to Clinical Preventive Services. 2nd
    edition 1996.
  • LB Russell. Is Prevention Better than Cure? The
    Brookings Institution Washington DC, 1986.
  • LB Russell. Educated Guesses making policy
    about medical screening tests. University of
    California Press, 1994.

6
Screening(see Eddy, Vol. 1, 30, p 280)
  • Two basic assumptions
  • The disease is progressive
  • Earlier treatment more effective than later
    treatment
  • Often implied, but not always true
  • cheaper to screen treat early, than to treat
    later stages and/or die from the disease

7
Things to look at when evaluating screening
  • What is benefit of finding an early case? What
    is cost of missing an early case?
  • is there good evidence of early treatment
    effectiveness?
  • is there other tangible benefit of case finding?

8
  • Characteristics of population to be screened
  • Burden of disease in this population
  • morbidity mortality
  • prevalence incidence
  • Is selective screening feasible?
  • high risk group identifiable easily?
  • What are the competing risks in this population?

9
  • Characteristics of the screening test itself in
    the target population
  • sensitivity
  • specificity
  • cost per screen
  • Gold standard (confirmatory) test
  • sensitivity, specificity
  • costs
  • side effects

10
  • What are the costs of
  • treatment for the disease?
  • stage by stage
  • a false negative?
  • how are cases usually found? Does missing the
    case on screen mean it is missed forever?
  • false positive?
  • risks of confirmatory test
  • psychologic risks / harms worry, etc.
  • labeling

11
A general model for screening... first lets
look at a disease we may be familiar with
12
Natural history timeline for cervical carcinoma
dysplasia
Asymp-tomatic invasive cancer
Sympto-matic invasive cancer
Death from metastatic cancer
Ca in situ
(intervals not to scale -- will vary from patient
to patient)
13
General model for a progressive disease
Biologic onset
First detectable by screening test
Severe clinical illness (eg metastases)
Death from the disease
Usual time of diagnosis
Pre-sx interval
The benefit of screening is to gain lead time
important to have evidence this in fact produces
better outcomes!
Lead Time
Actually detected by screen
14
Causal Pathways(Battista Fletcher)
  • Useful tool to map out relationship between
    screening and the clinical events that must occur
    for a given maneuver to influence a target
    condition
  • illustrate with causal pathway for early
    detection of hypertension

15
Blood pressure measurement
Antihypetensive treatment
Hypertensive individuals identified
Blood pressure controlled
Occurence of stroke prevented
Asymptomatic individuals
The most direct -- and strongest -- evidence of
benefit would be RCT of program to measure blood
pressure in asymptomatic individuals, then
following them long term to measure reduction of
stroke incidence
16
evidence that control actually leads to desired
outcomes in these individuals
ability to control the intermediate condition
ability to detect the condition
Without such evidence, need to infer
effectiveness by combining evidence about the
separate links
17
  • Recall how evidence is evaluated
  • Vol. 1, 14 , p 109 ff --Mulrow et al.
    Integrating heterogeneous pieces of evidence in
    systematic reviews. Ann Intern Med 1997
    127989-995.

18
What can go wrong in assessing the evidence about
effectiveness of screening?
  • Two major biases affect these data
  • lead time bias
  • length bias

19
Lead time bias
without screening
with screening
average survival time post diagnosis has increased
But actual time of death remains the same!!
20
Lead time bias
  • We think early detection has increased survival
  • in fact all it has done is increase the time the
    patient is aware of his disease!
  • treatment could even hasten death and it might
    appear survival is longer post diagnosis!!
  • A great deal of cancer literature is susceptible
    to lead time bias
  • Cannot just look at survival time post diagnosis.

21
Length bias
Survival due to screening and treatment may be
over rated because screening will tend to
discover more slow-growing disease.
22
Suppose there are two subtypes of the disease
Type 1 fast progression
Type 2 slow progression
23
Length of time in pre-clinical phase longer in
Type 2 than in Type 1
Type 1
Type 2
24
Periodic screening will tend to detect more of
Type 2, as these have longer exposure in the
critical interval for screening.
Type 1
Type 2
25
But look!! Type 2 individuals have a longer
survival time from time of diagnosis than do Type
1.
Type 1
Type 2
26
  • Without screening, suppose type 1 and type 2 were
    equal fractions of the population
  • average survival time is 5050 mixture of the
    short and long survival times.
  • With screening, the screen-detected population
    has a higher fraction of type 2 (slow)
    individuals
  • mix will be proportional to ratio of the two
    intervals
  • suppose it is 7030 in favor of long interval
  • average survival time will be longer in screen
    detected individuals!

27
Length bias
  • Even if the treatment tended to be harmful and
    shorten life, because more longer interval
    individuals tend to be detected by screening, the
    screening program will appear to be effective!!

28
  • Does not apply to all screening
  • Assumes both subtypes of the disease is equally
    detectable in the pre-clinical phase (prostate
    cancer? breast cancer?)
  • But if, say, more malignant disease is more
    detectable for physiologic reasons (bladder
    cancer, where more malignant cells may exfoliate
    faster?) then screening selectively finds more
    aggressive disease.

29
  • Prostate cancer --
  • clearly there is a range of more and less
    aggressive subtypes (see Albertsen et al, JAMA
    1998, for long-term survival in untreated
    prostate cancer by Gleason score).
  • Breast cancer --
  • Polun Chang dissertation 20-30 of
    screen-detected breast cancers have limited
    malignant potential

30
Length bias particularly worrisome
  • Black Welch (Vol. 2 13, p 678)Advances in
    detection often go hand in hand with broadening
    of definition of disease (e.g., DCIS and breast
    cancer) thus we are technologically increasing
    the detection interval, but also increasing the
    defined interval from biologic onset without
    being sure that all that is detected is truly
    disease.
  • Welch Black (Vol. 1, 32 (k), p 351) autopsy
    studies show huge reservoir of DCIS so perhaps
    most women have very slow breast cancer that
    will never bother them if undetected!

31
  • A prospective RCT of screening with follow up to
    the critical endpoint may avoid length bias
  • look at overall survival rates in both groups,
    which start out with same mix of disease types.
  • But you cant look at survival in just
    screen-detected cases and compare to
    non-randomized population control.
  • Probably affects disease-specific survival
    analyses too.Very tough problem for
    epidemiology and statistics!!

32
Elements of Screening Protocol Design
  • Many, many factors go into the design of a
    screening intervention.
  • Not all combinations of these will be evaluated
    empirically even though they affect the
    effectiveness of the program.

33
Some of the control knobs for a screening
program
  • Which screening test is used
  • Which follow up protocol is used for
    screen-positives
  • Target population
  • risk factors for selective screening
  • setting in which they are screened (incidental,
    systematic, prompted, etc.)
  • age start screening
  • age end screening
  • Screening interval

34
Each of these will affect the effectiveness and
the costs of screening
  • Eddy (vol. 1, 30, p. 280) demonstrates the
    variation in costs and effectiveness of screening
    for cervical cancer as function of
  • screening interval (1 yr, 3 yr, 5 yr)
  • age to begin (20, 25, 30, 35)
  • assumptions about natural history
  • increasing sensitivity and/or specificity (and
    costs!) of the screening exam
  • You should read this paper!

35
  • When these parameters are changed, the
    cost-effectiveness changes generally in the
    direction you expect.
  • But often the rate of change is different from
    expectations.
  • Point is You have to do the calculations to be
    able to figure out the effects.

36
How are these calculations done?
  • Often a computer simulation of a cohort of
    targeted individuals.
  • Model the natural history of the disease
  • Model the screening intervention
  • Model the treatment
  • Do all of this simulated year-by-year.
  • Example Screening for Abdominal Aortic Aneurysm
    -- AAA

37
I just happen to have a spreadsheet for one
example...
Before showing the spreadsheet, lets look a bit
at the problem and the method...
38
Should we screen for AAA?
  • AAA is clearly a progressive disease
  • aneurysm starts small, then gradually expands
  • Effective treatment
  • elective surgical repair of AAA relatively safe
    and effective.
  • Known risk groups
  • age, sex, smoking status
  • Good test available
  • abdominal ultrasound is both relatively sensitive
    and specific
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