Estimating the Effect of Targeted Screening Strategies

التفاصيل البيبلوغرافية
العنوان: Estimating the Effect of Targeted Screening Strategies
المؤلفون: Duncan C. Thomas
المصدر: Epidemiology. 28:470-478
بيانات النشر: Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health), 2017.
سنة النشر: 2017
مصطلحات موضوعية: Oncology, medicine.medical_specialty, education.field_of_study, Epidemiology, business.industry, Colorectal cancer, Inverse probability weighting, Confounding, Population, Cancer, medicine.disease, 3. Good health, 03 medical and health sciences, 0302 clinical medicine, 030220 oncology & carcinogenesis, Internal medicine, Statistics, Covariate, Medicine, 030212 general & internal medicine, Family history, Risk assessment, business, education
الوصف: Screening behavior depends on previous screening history and family members' behaviors, which can act as both confounders and intermediate variables on a causal pathway from screening to disease risk. Conventional analyses that adjust for these variables can lead to incorrect inferences about the causal effect of screening if high-risk individuals are more likely to be screened. Analyzing the data in a manner that treats screening as randomized conditional on covariates allows causal parameters to be estimated; inverse probability weighting based on propensity of exposure scores is one such method considered here. I simulated family data under plausible models for the underlying disease process and for screening behavior to assess the performance of alternative methods of analysis and whether a targeted screening approach based on individuals' risk factors would lead to a greater reduction in cancer incidence in the population than a uniform screening policy. Simulation results indicate that there can be a substantial underestimation of the effect of screening on subsequent cancer risk when using conventional analysis approaches, which is avoided by using inverse probability weighting. A large case-control study of colonoscopy and colorectal cancer from Germany shows a strong protective effect of screening, but inverse probability weighting makes this effect even stronger. Targeted screening approaches based on either fixed risk factors or family history yield somewhat greater reductions in cancer incidence with fewer screens needed to prevent one cancer than population-wide approaches, but the differences may not be large enough to justify the additional effort required. See video abstract at, http://links.lww.com/EDE/B207Test.
تدمد: 1044-3983
الوصول الحر: https://explore.openaire.eu/search/publication?articleId=doi_________::cc0652b488599971bccb52ca5a1454cbTest
https://doi.org/10.1097/ede.0000000000000668Test
حقوق: OPEN
رقم الانضمام: edsair.doi...........cc0652b488599971bccb52ca5a1454cb
قاعدة البيانات: OpenAIRE