The projected health and economic impact of increased colorectal cancer screening participation among Canadians by income quintile
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Published:2024-03-19
Issue:3
Volume:115
Page:384-394
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ISSN:0008-4263
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Container-title:Canadian Journal of Public Health
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language:en
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Short-container-title:Can J Public Health
Author:
Adegbulugbe Abisola A.ORCID, Farah EliyaORCID, Ruan YibingORCID, Yong Jean H. E.ORCID, Cheung Winson Y., Brenner Darren R.ORCID
Abstract
Abstract
Objectives
Disparities in colorectal cancer (CRC) screening uptake by socioeconomic status have been observed in Canada. We used the OncoSim-Colorectal model to evaluate the health and economic outcomes associated with increasing the participation rates of CRC screening programs to 60% among Canadians in different income quintiles.
Methods
Baseline CRC screening participation rates were obtained from the 2017 Canadian Community Health Survey. The survey participants were categorized into income quintiles using their reported household income and 2016 Canadian Census income quintile thresholds. Within each quintile, the participation rate was the proportion of respondents aged 50–74 who reported having had a fecal test in the past two years. Using the OncoSim-Colorectal model, we simulated an increase in CRC screening uptake to 60% across income quintiles to assess the effects on CRC incidence, mortality, and associated economic costs from 2024 to 2073.
Results
Increasing CRC screening participation rates to 60% across all income quintiles would prevent 69,100 CRC cases and 36,600 CRC deaths over 50 years. The improvement of clinical outcomes would also translate to increased person-years and health-adjusted person-years. The largest impact was observed in the lowest income group, with 22,200 cases and 11,700 deaths prevented over 50 years. Increased participation could lead to higher screening costs ($121 million CAD more per year) and lower treatments costs ($95 million CAD less per year), averaged over the period 2024–2073.
Conclusion
Increased screening participation will improve clinical outcomes across all income groups while alleviating associated treatment costs. The benefits of increased participation will be strongest among the lowest income quintile.
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
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