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Early economic evaluation of magnetic resonance imaging for prostate cancer detection in primary care

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posted on 2025-08-02, 12:20 authored by SWD Merriel, P Buttle, SJ Price, N Burns-Cox, FM Walter, W Hamilton, AE Spencer
To explore the potential impacts of incorporating pre-biopsy magnetic resonance imaging into primary care as a triage test within the prostate cancer diagnostic pathway. Subjects and methods Decision analytic modelling with decision trees was utilised for this early economic evaluation. A conceptual model was developed reflecting the common primary care routes to diagnosis for prostate cancer; opportunistic, asymptomatic Prostate Specific Antigen (PSA) screening or symptomatic presentation. The use of multiparametric MRI (mpMRI) or biparametric MRI (bpMRI) as a primary care triage test following an elevated PSA result was evaluated. A health system perspective was adopted with a time horizon of 12 months. Health effects were expressed in terms of utilities drawn from the literature. The primary outcome was prostate cancer diagnosis. Evidence used to inform the model was drawn from published primary studies, systematic reviews, and secondary analyses of primary and secondary care datasets. Results Base-case analysis showed that the PSA pathway was dominated by both mpMRI- and bpMRI-based pathways for patients undergoing opportunistic screening and symptomatic assessment. bpMRI pathways had greater improvement in cost and utility than mpMRI pathways in both clinical scenarios. Significantly more MRI scans would be performed using the modelled approach (66,626 scans vs 37,456 scans per 100,000 patients per annum), with fewer subsequent urgent suspected cancer referrals for both mpMRI (38% reduction for screening and symptomatic patients) and bpMRI (72% reduction for screening; 71% for symptomatic) pathways, and a small increase in number of missed cancer diagnoses. Deterministic sensitivity analyses, varying each parameter to its upper and lower 95% confidence intervals, showed no significant change in the dominance of the MRI-based prostate cancer diagnostic pathways. Conclusion Using prostate MRI as a second-level triage test for suspected prostate cancer in primary care could reduce health service costs without a detrimental effect on patient utility

Funding

C56843/A21550

C8640/A23385

Cancer Research UK

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© 2024 The Author(s). BJUI Compass published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd on behalf of BJU International Company. This is an open access article under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits use, distribution and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.

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  • No

Submission date

2024-04-29

Notes

This is the final version. Available on open access from Wiley via the DOI in this record Data availability statement: Data used for this model from published papers are freely available to access. CPRD data from the CRUK IMPACT study and South-West Peninsula Cancer Alliance Prostate Cancer Dashboard data are not publicly available; any requests for access should be made to SJP and NBC respectively

Journal

BJUI Compass

Publisher

Wiley / BJU International Company

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  • Version of Record

Language

en

FCD date

2024-07-02T10:30:01Z

FOA date

2024-07-30T13:11:25Z

Citation

Published online 10 July 2024

Department

  • Health and Community Sciences

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