Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
Cost-effectiveness analysis of prostate-specific antigen screening in China: a middle-income population-based microsimulation study.
- Year:
- 2025
- Authors:
- Liu J et al.
- Affiliation:
- Department of Urology · China
Abstract
<h4>Background</h4>The significance of prostate-specific antigen (PSA) in reducing the health burden of prostate cancer is widely deliberated. We conducted this study, utilising real-world data, to develop a comprehensive, cost-effectiveness analysis model for PSA screening. By evaluating various screening strategies, we aim to provide policymakers with robust research evidence to inform future PSA screening policies.<h4>Methods</h4>We constructed a microsimulation model to assess 56 conventional population-wide PSA screening strategies based on data from a five-year trial with 104,751 participants, a 20-year multicentre database and parameters collected across China, along with approaches involving genetic risk stratification based on family history, polygenic risk scores, and high-penetrance genes. Clinical outcomes including incidence, metastasis-incidence ratio (M/I ratio), and annual case-fatality rate (CFR) were evaluated. Cost-effectiveness was evaluated using incremental quality-adjusted life years (QALYs) and incremental cost-effectiveness ratios (ICERs). Sensitivity and scenario analyses were conducted to test the robustness of the results.<h4>Findings</h4>All strategies led to QALY gains and were considered cost-effective under a willingness-to-pay threshold equal to China's per capita GDP ($12,510.12 per QALY). The most intensive protocol (45-74 years, annually, with age-specific PSA cutoffs) had an ICER of 5535.25USD/QALY, yielding 2.79 incremental QALYs compared to non-screening, reducing M/I ratio from 39.05% to 1.04%, and CFR from 6.14% to 2.85%. The genetic risk-specific protocol offered comparable QALYs (2.79 vs. 2.76) and ICERs (5287.23 vs. 4904.90USD/QALY), allowing for 66.8% of average-risk individuals with extended screening intervals or postponed screening start age.<h4>Interpretation</h4>PSA screening in China has the potential to improve overall health outcomes in a cost-effective manner. Personalised screening based on genetic risk may provide an efficient alternative to uniform strategies, potentially reducing unnecessary interventions among those at lower risk. This study provides a solid evidence base for Chinese policymakers to consider establishing a cost-effective, risk-stratified PCa screening programme.<h4>Funding</h4>Shenzhen-Hong Kong-Macau S&T Programme, HKU Seed Fund, RJH Cultivating Star Programme, HK UGC Research Impact Fund and Guangdong High-Level Talents Programme.
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Search related cases →Original publication: https://europepmc.org/article/MED/41018944