AI Article Synopsis

  • This study estimates the effectiveness of population-based breast cancer screening using survival data rather than individual screening data, aiming for a more unbiased evaluation.
  • A unique time-dependent switched design was implemented to compare screen-detected versus clinically detected cases, utilizing data from a Swedish trial and a Taiwanese screening program.
  • The results showed a relative effectiveness of 33% for the Swedish program and 42% for Taiwan, leading to estimates of 446 and 806 women needing to be screened to prevent one death from breast cancer in each dataset, respectively.

Article Abstract

Background: This study is aimed at estimating the unbiased effectiveness of population-based breast cancer service screening based on case survival information alone rather than large-scale individual screening data pursuant to the intention-to-treat principle of a randomized-controlled trial.

Methods: A novel time-dependent switched design with two modalities of cancer detection (screen-detected vs clinically detected) was proposed to evaluate the effectiveness of breast cancer screening. We used data on 767 patients from Kopparberg in the Swedish Two-County trial and on 78 587 patients in the Taiwan population-based service screening. We estimated the relative rate of the screen-detected vs the clinically detected with adjustment for both truncation and lead-time biases. The absolute effectiveness in terms of the number needed to screen (NNS) for averting one death from breast cancer was estimated.

Results: The relative rate of effectiveness was estimated as 33%, which was consistent with the 37% reported from the original Swedish randomized-controlled trial. The corresponding estimate for the Taiwan screening programme was 42%, which was also very close to that estimated using individual screening history data (41%). Both relative estimates were further applied to yield 446 and 806 of NNS for averting one death from breast cancer for the corresponding two data sets.

Conclusion: The proposed time-dependent switched design and analysis with two modalities of case survival information provides a very efficient means for estimating the unbiased estimates of relative and absolute effectiveness of population-based breast cancer service screening dispensing with a large amount of individual screening history data.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9749717PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/ije/dyac096DOI Listing

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