Patient preferences for breast cancer screening: a systematic review update to inform recommendations by the Canadian Task Force on Preventive Health Care.

IF 6.3 4区 医学 Q1 MEDICINE, GENERAL & INTERNAL
Jennifer Pillay, Samantha Guitard, Sholeh Rahman, Sabrina Saba, Ashiqur Rahman, Liza Bialy, Nicole Gehring, Maria Tan, Alex Melton, Lisa Hartling
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These findings can then be considered as patient input when balancing effect estimates on benefits and harms reported by empirical evidence on the clinical effectiveness of screening programs. This systematic review update examined the relative importance placed by patients on the potential benefits and harms of mammography-based breast cancer screening to inform an update to the 2018 Canadian Task Force on Preventive Health Care's guideline on screening.</p><p><strong>Methods: </strong>We screened all articles from our previous review (search December 2017) and updated our searches to June 19, 2023 in MEDLINE, PsycINFO, and CINAHL. We also screened grey literature, submissions by stakeholders, and reference lists. The target population was cisgender women and other adults assigned female at birth (including transgender men and nonbinary persons) aged ≥ 35 years and at average or moderately increased risk for breast cancer. Studies of patients with breast cancer were eligible for health-state utility data for relevant outcomes. We sought three types of data, directly through (i) disutilities of screening and curative treatment health states (measuring the impact of the outcome on one's health-related quality of life; utilities measured on a scale of 0 [death] to 1 [perfect health]), and (ii) other preference-based data, such as outcome trade-offs, and indirectly through (iii) the relative importance of benefits versus harms inferred from attitudes, intentions, and behaviors towards screening among patients provided with estimates of the magnitudes of benefit(s) and harms(s). For screening, we used machine learning as one of the reviewers after at least 50% of studies had been reviewed in duplicate by humans; full-text selection used independent review by two humans. Data extraction and risk of bias assessments used a single reviewer with verification. Our main analysis for utilities used data from utility-based health-related quality of life tools (e.g., EQ-5D) in patients; a disutility value of about 0.04 can be considered a minimally important value for the Canadian public. When suitable, we pooled utilities and explored heterogeneity. Disutilities were calculated for screening health states and between different treatment states. Non-utility data were grouped into categories, based on outcomes compared (e.g. for trade-off data), participant age, and our judgements of the net benefit of screening portrayed by the studies. Thereafter, we compared and contrasted findings while considering sample sizes, risk of bias, subgroup findings and data on knowledge scores, and created summary statements for each data set. Certainty assessments followed GRADE guidance for patient preferences and used consensus among at least two reviewers.</p><p><strong>Findings: </strong>Eighty-two studies (38 on utilities) were included. 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There was moderate certainty that a majority (>50%) and possibly a large majority (>75%) of women probably accept up to six cases of overdiagnosis to prevent one breast-cancer death; there was some uncertainty because of an indication that overdiagnosis was not fully understood by participants in some cases. Low certainty evidence suggested that a large majority may accept that screening may reduce breast-cancer but not all-cause mortality, at least when presented with relatively high rates of breast-cancer mortality reductions (n = 2; 2 and 5 fewer per 1000 screened), and at least a majority accept that to prevent one breast-cancer death at least a few hundred patients will receive a FP result and 10-15 will have a FP resolved through biopsy. 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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Background: Different guideline panels, and individuals, may make different decisions based in part on their preferences. Preferences for or against an intervention are viewed as a consequence of the relative importance people place on the expected or experienced health outcomes it incurs. These findings can then be considered as patient input when balancing effect estimates on benefits and harms reported by empirical evidence on the clinical effectiveness of screening programs. This systematic review update examined the relative importance placed by patients on the potential benefits and harms of mammography-based breast cancer screening to inform an update to the 2018 Canadian Task Force on Preventive Health Care's guideline on screening.

Methods: We screened all articles from our previous review (search December 2017) and updated our searches to June 19, 2023 in MEDLINE, PsycINFO, and CINAHL. We also screened grey literature, submissions by stakeholders, and reference lists. The target population was cisgender women and other adults assigned female at birth (including transgender men and nonbinary persons) aged ≥ 35 years and at average or moderately increased risk for breast cancer. Studies of patients with breast cancer were eligible for health-state utility data for relevant outcomes. We sought three types of data, directly through (i) disutilities of screening and curative treatment health states (measuring the impact of the outcome on one's health-related quality of life; utilities measured on a scale of 0 [death] to 1 [perfect health]), and (ii) other preference-based data, such as outcome trade-offs, and indirectly through (iii) the relative importance of benefits versus harms inferred from attitudes, intentions, and behaviors towards screening among patients provided with estimates of the magnitudes of benefit(s) and harms(s). For screening, we used machine learning as one of the reviewers after at least 50% of studies had been reviewed in duplicate by humans; full-text selection used independent review by two humans. Data extraction and risk of bias assessments used a single reviewer with verification. Our main analysis for utilities used data from utility-based health-related quality of life tools (e.g., EQ-5D) in patients; a disutility value of about 0.04 can be considered a minimally important value for the Canadian public. When suitable, we pooled utilities and explored heterogeneity. Disutilities were calculated for screening health states and between different treatment states. Non-utility data were grouped into categories, based on outcomes compared (e.g. for trade-off data), participant age, and our judgements of the net benefit of screening portrayed by the studies. Thereafter, we compared and contrasted findings while considering sample sizes, risk of bias, subgroup findings and data on knowledge scores, and created summary statements for each data set. Certainty assessments followed GRADE guidance for patient preferences and used consensus among at least two reviewers.

Findings: Eighty-two studies (38 on utilities) were included. The estimated disutilities were 0.07 for a positive screening result (moderate certainty), 0.03-0.04 for a false positive (FP; "additional testing" resolved as negative for cancer) (low certainty), and 0.08 for untreated screen-detected cancer (moderate certainty) or (low certainty) an interval cancer. At ≤12 months, disutilities of mastectomy (vs. breast-conserving therapy), chemotherapy (vs. none) (low certainty), and radiation therapy (vs. none) (moderate certainty) were 0.02-0.03, 0.02-0.04, and little-to-none, respectively, though in each case findings were somewhat limited in their applicability. Over the longer term, there was moderate certainty for little-to-no disutility from mastectomy versus breast-conserving surgery/lumpectomy with radiation and from radiation. There was moderate certainty that a majority (>50%) and possibly a large majority (>75%) of women probably accept up to six cases of overdiagnosis to prevent one breast-cancer death; there was some uncertainty because of an indication that overdiagnosis was not fully understood by participants in some cases. Low certainty evidence suggested that a large majority may accept that screening may reduce breast-cancer but not all-cause mortality, at least when presented with relatively high rates of breast-cancer mortality reductions (n = 2; 2 and 5 fewer per 1000 screened), and at least a majority accept that to prevent one breast-cancer death at least a few hundred patients will receive a FP result and 10-15 will have a FP resolved through biopsy. An upper limit for an acceptable number of FPs was not evaluated. When using data from studies assessing attitudes, intentions, and screening behaviors, across all age groups but most evident for women in their 40s, preferences reduced as the net benefit presented by study authors decreased in magnitude. In a relatively low net-benefit scenario, a majority of patients in their 40s may not weigh the benefits as greater than the harms from screening whereas for women in their 50s a large majority may prefer screening (low certainty evidence for both ages). There was moderate certainty that a large majority of women 50 years of age and 50 to 69 years of age, who have usually experienced screening, weigh the benefits as greater than the harms from screening in a high net-benefit scenario. A large majority of patients aged 70-71 years who have recently screened probably think the benefits outweigh the harms of continuing to screen. A majority of women in their mid-70s to early 80s may prefer to continue screening.

Conclusions: Evidence across a range of data sources on how informed patients value the potential outcomes from breast-cancer screening will be useful during decision-making for recommendations. The evidence suggests that all of the outcomes examined have importance to women of any age, that there is at least some and possibly substantial (among those in their 40s) variability across and within age groups about the acceptable magnitude of effects across outcomes, and that provision of easily understandable information on the likelihood of the outcomes may be necessary to enable informed decision making. Although studies came from a wide range of countries, there were limited data from Canada and about whether findings applied well across an ethnographically and socioeconomically diverse population.

Systematic review registration: Protocol available at Open Science Framework https://osf.io/xngsu/ .

患者对乳腺癌筛查的偏好:为加拿大预防保健工作组的建议提供信息的系统性回顾更新。
背景:不同的指南小组和个人可能会根据自己的偏好做出不同的决定。支持或反对一项干预措施的偏好被视为人们对其预期或经历的健康结果的相对重视程度的结果。在平衡有关筛查项目临床有效性的经验证据所报告的益处和危害的效果估计值时,可将这些结果视为患者的意见。本系统综述更新研究了患者对基于乳腺X线摄影的乳腺癌筛查潜在益处和危害的相对重视程度,为2018年加拿大预防保健工作组的筛查指南更新提供了参考:我们筛选了之前综述(2017 年 12 月检索)中的所有文章,并在 MEDLINE、PsycINFO 和 CINAHL 中更新检索至 2023 年 6 月 19 日。我们还筛选了灰色文献、利益相关者提交的资料以及参考文献列表。目标人群为年龄≥ 35 岁、罹患乳腺癌风险处于平均或中度增加水平的顺性女性和其他出生时即被指定为女性的成年人(包括变性男性和非二元性人士)。针对乳腺癌患者的研究有资格获得相关结果的健康状态效用数据。我们寻求三种类型的数据,直接数据包括:(i) 筛查和根治性治疗健康状态的效用(衡量结果对个人健康相关生活质量的影响;效用以 0 [死亡] 到 1 [完美健康] 为衡量标准);(ii) 其他基于偏好的数据,如结果权衡;间接数据包括:(iii) 根据患者对筛查的态度、意向和行为推断出的益处与害处的相对重要性,并提供益处和害处的估计值。在筛查方面,我们使用机器学习作为审稿人之一,此前至少有 50% 的研究已由人类进行了重复审阅;全文筛选则由两名人类进行独立审阅。数据提取和偏倚风险评估则由一名审稿人进行核实。我们对效用的主要分析采用了基于效用的患者健康相关生活质量工具(如 EQ-5D)中的数据;对于加拿大公众而言,约 0.04 的效用值可视为最小重要值。在合适的情况下,我们对效用进行了汇总,并探讨了异质性。我们计算了筛查健康状态和不同治疗状态之间的效用率。非效用数据根据比较的结果(如权衡数据)、参与者年龄以及我们对研究中描绘的筛查净效益的判断进行分组。之后,我们在考虑样本大小、偏倚风险、亚组研究结果和知识评分数据的同时,对研究结果进行了比较和对比,并为每组数据创建了总结陈述。确定性评估遵循 GRADE 对患者偏好的指导,并在至少两名审稿人之间达成共识:共纳入 82 项研究(38 项关于效用)。筛查结果呈阳性(中等确定性)的估计效用为0.07,假阳性(FP;"额外检测 "结果为癌症阴性)(低确定性)的估计效用为0.03-0.04,筛查发现的癌症未经治疗(中等确定性)或间期癌症(低确定性)的估计效用为0.08。在≤12 个月时,乳房切除术(与保乳疗法相比)、化疗(与无化疗相比)(低度确定性)和放疗(与无放疗相比)(中度确定性)的无效性分别为 0.02-0.03、0.02-0.04 和几乎为零,但在每种情况下,研究结果的适用性都受到一定限制。从长期来看,乳房切除术与保乳手术/肿块切除术加放射治疗以及放射治疗的效用几乎没有差异,这一点具有中等确定性。有中等确定性的证据表明,大多数(>50%)甚至可能是绝大多数(>75%)的妇女可能会接受多达六次的过度诊断,以避免一次乳腺癌死亡;但也有一些不确定性,因为有迹象表明,在某些情况下,参与者并不完全理解过度诊断。低确定性证据表明,绝大多数人可能接受筛查可以降低乳腺癌死亡率,但不能降低全因死亡率,至少是在乳腺癌死亡率降低率相对较高的情况下(n = 2;每 1000 例筛查中减少 2 例和 5 例),至少大多数人接受为了避免 1 例乳腺癌死亡,至少有几百名患者会收到 FP 结果,10-15 例患者会通过活检解决 FP 问题。没有对可接受的 FP 数量上限进行评估。当使用评估态度、意向和筛查行为的研究数据时,在所有年龄组中,但以40多岁的女性最为明显,随着研究作者提出的净获益减少,偏好也随之降低。
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来源期刊
Systematic Reviews
Systematic Reviews Medicine-Medicine (miscellaneous)
CiteScore
8.30
自引率
0.00%
发文量
241
审稿时长
11 weeks
期刊介绍: Systematic Reviews encompasses all aspects of the design, conduct and reporting of systematic reviews. The journal publishes high quality systematic review products including systematic review protocols, systematic reviews related to a very broad definition of health, rapid reviews, updates of already completed systematic reviews, and methods research related to the science of systematic reviews, such as decision modelling. At this time Systematic Reviews does not accept reviews of in vitro studies. The journal also aims to ensure that the results of all well-conducted systematic reviews are published, regardless of their outcome.
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