Colorectal cancer screening programmes, level of organisation, testing strategy, and their impact on participation

Health Economics seminar

Early detection of colorectal cancer (CRC) greatly increases the chances of cure. However, uptake of regular CRC screening is relatively low, with an estimated range of 20% to 50% in most OECD countries, which inhibits the overall impact of screening. The key is therefore to introduce effective strategies aiming at increasing screening participation.

Speaker
Sophie Guthmuller
Date
Tuesday 1 Oct 2024, 12:00 - 13:00
Type
Seminar
Room
3.18
Space
Langeveld building
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Several different screening programmes exist that vary with the level of organisation of the programme (i.e. the number of criteria present, related to governance, health workforce qualification, access to services, service delivery provision, information system, and quality insurance) and the testing strategy itself (stool test or colonoscopy). Thanks to the specific setup of Austria, we can study the impact of three different colorectal cancer screening programmes that (co-)exist in some provinces, on participation. 

We use regional and age eligibility variations in the screening programmes and employ difference-in-differences and regression discontinuities to identify the causal effects of the programmes. The analyses are based on claims data from the largest public health insurance provider in Austria. 

Results

The results show that all three screening programmes increase participation, the effect is the strongest for the population-based screening programme characterised by the highest level of organization including the regular sending of a stool test kit a home. Participation increases by 30 percentage points on average among the 40 to 80 years old, and by 20 percentage points at the youngest age cutoff of 40. 

The impact of the low-organised programme where CRC screening is offered within the general health checkup at the GP office is 13 percentage points at age 50 when a stool test is used and 1.3 percentage points when a colonoscopy is used as the first testing tool. The middle-organised programme that offers colonoscopy only without an invitation system, but a quality insurance system and the guarantee of a qualified workforce, increases the take-up of a colonoscopy by 1 percentage point, an increase that does not differ from the impact of the low-organized programme. 

However, screening participation increases further when two programmes co-exist, therefore combining various programme types could be beneficial in reaching as large a share of the population as possible with screening programmes. The heterogeneity analysis shows that participation is larger for women. By testing strategy, women are more likely to be screened with a stool test, and men with a colonoscopy as the first testing tool.

This is an in-person seminar, but a Zoom link is available upon request (healtheconomics@ese.eur.nl).

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