Quantification of overdiagnosis in randomised trials of cancer screening: an overview and re-analysis of systematic reviews

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Standard

Quantification of overdiagnosis in randomised trials of cancer screening : an overview and re-analysis of systematic reviews. / Voss, Theis; Krag, Mikela; Martiny, Frederik; Heleno, Bruno; Jørgensen, Karsten Juhl; Brandt Brodersen, John.

In: Cancer Epidemiology, Vol. 84, 102352, 2023.

Research output: Contribution to journalReviewResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Voss, T, Krag, M, Martiny, F, Heleno, B, Jørgensen, KJ & Brandt Brodersen, J 2023, 'Quantification of overdiagnosis in randomised trials of cancer screening: an overview and re-analysis of systematic reviews', Cancer Epidemiology, vol. 84, 102352. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.canep.2023.102352

APA

Voss, T., Krag, M., Martiny, F., Heleno, B., Jørgensen, K. J., & Brandt Brodersen, J. (2023). Quantification of overdiagnosis in randomised trials of cancer screening: an overview and re-analysis of systematic reviews. Cancer Epidemiology, 84, [102352]. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.canep.2023.102352

Vancouver

Voss T, Krag M, Martiny F, Heleno B, Jørgensen KJ, Brandt Brodersen J. Quantification of overdiagnosis in randomised trials of cancer screening: an overview and re-analysis of systematic reviews. Cancer Epidemiology. 2023;84. 102352. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.canep.2023.102352

Author

Voss, Theis ; Krag, Mikela ; Martiny, Frederik ; Heleno, Bruno ; Jørgensen, Karsten Juhl ; Brandt Brodersen, John. / Quantification of overdiagnosis in randomised trials of cancer screening : an overview and re-analysis of systematic reviews. In: Cancer Epidemiology. 2023 ; Vol. 84.

Bibtex

@article{5d14666460b34470b64156a017caff00,
title = "Quantification of overdiagnosis in randomised trials of cancer screening: an overview and re-analysis of systematic reviews",
abstract = "The degree of overdiagnosis in common cancer screening trials is uncertain due to inadequate design of trials, varying definition and methods used to estimate overdiagnosis. Therefore, we aimed to quantify the risk of overdiagnosis for the most widely implemented cancer screening programmes and assess the implications of design limitations and biases in cancer screening trials on the estimates of overdiagnosis by conducting an overview and re-analysis of systematic reviews of cancer screening. We searched PubMed and the Cochrane Library from their inception dates to November 29, 2021. Eligible studies included systematic reviews of randomised trials comparing cancer screening interventions to no screening, which reported cancer incidence for both trial arms. We extracted data on study characteristics, cancer incidence and assessed the risk of bias using the Cochrane Collaboration's risk of bias tool. We included 19 trials described in 30 articles for review, reporting results for the following types of screening: mammography for breast cancer, chest X-ray or low-dose CT for lung cancer, alpha-foetoprotein and ultrasound for liver cancer, digital rectal examination, prostate-specific antigen, and transrectal ultrasound for prostate cancer, and CA-125 test and/or ultrasound for ovarian cancer. No trials on screening for melanoma were eligible. Only one trial (5%) had low risk in all bias domains, leading to a post-hoc meta-analysis, excluding trials with high risk of bias in critical domains, finding the extent of overdiagnosis ranged from 17% to 38% across cancer screening programmes. We conclude that there is a significant risk of overdiagnosis in the included randomised trials on cancer screening. We found that trials were generally not designed to estimate overdiagnosis and many trials had high risk of biases that may draw the estimates of overdiagnosis towards the null. In effect, the true extent of overdiagnosis due to cancer screening is likely underestimated.",
keywords = "Cancer, Overdiagnosis, Screening",
author = "Theis Voss and Mikela Krag and Frederik Martiny and Bruno Heleno and J{\o}rgensen, {Karsten Juhl} and {Brandt Brodersen}, John",
note = "Publisher Copyright: {\textcopyright} 2023 The Authors",
year = "2023",
doi = "10.1016/j.canep.2023.102352",
language = "English",
volume = "84",
journal = "Cancer Epidemiology",
issn = "1877-7821",
publisher = "Elsevier",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Quantification of overdiagnosis in randomised trials of cancer screening

T2 - an overview and re-analysis of systematic reviews

AU - Voss, Theis

AU - Krag, Mikela

AU - Martiny, Frederik

AU - Heleno, Bruno

AU - Jørgensen, Karsten Juhl

AU - Brandt Brodersen, John

N1 - Publisher Copyright: © 2023 The Authors

PY - 2023

Y1 - 2023

N2 - The degree of overdiagnosis in common cancer screening trials is uncertain due to inadequate design of trials, varying definition and methods used to estimate overdiagnosis. Therefore, we aimed to quantify the risk of overdiagnosis for the most widely implemented cancer screening programmes and assess the implications of design limitations and biases in cancer screening trials on the estimates of overdiagnosis by conducting an overview and re-analysis of systematic reviews of cancer screening. We searched PubMed and the Cochrane Library from their inception dates to November 29, 2021. Eligible studies included systematic reviews of randomised trials comparing cancer screening interventions to no screening, which reported cancer incidence for both trial arms. We extracted data on study characteristics, cancer incidence and assessed the risk of bias using the Cochrane Collaboration's risk of bias tool. We included 19 trials described in 30 articles for review, reporting results for the following types of screening: mammography for breast cancer, chest X-ray or low-dose CT for lung cancer, alpha-foetoprotein and ultrasound for liver cancer, digital rectal examination, prostate-specific antigen, and transrectal ultrasound for prostate cancer, and CA-125 test and/or ultrasound for ovarian cancer. No trials on screening for melanoma were eligible. Only one trial (5%) had low risk in all bias domains, leading to a post-hoc meta-analysis, excluding trials with high risk of bias in critical domains, finding the extent of overdiagnosis ranged from 17% to 38% across cancer screening programmes. We conclude that there is a significant risk of overdiagnosis in the included randomised trials on cancer screening. We found that trials were generally not designed to estimate overdiagnosis and many trials had high risk of biases that may draw the estimates of overdiagnosis towards the null. In effect, the true extent of overdiagnosis due to cancer screening is likely underestimated.

AB - The degree of overdiagnosis in common cancer screening trials is uncertain due to inadequate design of trials, varying definition and methods used to estimate overdiagnosis. Therefore, we aimed to quantify the risk of overdiagnosis for the most widely implemented cancer screening programmes and assess the implications of design limitations and biases in cancer screening trials on the estimates of overdiagnosis by conducting an overview and re-analysis of systematic reviews of cancer screening. We searched PubMed and the Cochrane Library from their inception dates to November 29, 2021. Eligible studies included systematic reviews of randomised trials comparing cancer screening interventions to no screening, which reported cancer incidence for both trial arms. We extracted data on study characteristics, cancer incidence and assessed the risk of bias using the Cochrane Collaboration's risk of bias tool. We included 19 trials described in 30 articles for review, reporting results for the following types of screening: mammography for breast cancer, chest X-ray or low-dose CT for lung cancer, alpha-foetoprotein and ultrasound for liver cancer, digital rectal examination, prostate-specific antigen, and transrectal ultrasound for prostate cancer, and CA-125 test and/or ultrasound for ovarian cancer. No trials on screening for melanoma were eligible. Only one trial (5%) had low risk in all bias domains, leading to a post-hoc meta-analysis, excluding trials with high risk of bias in critical domains, finding the extent of overdiagnosis ranged from 17% to 38% across cancer screening programmes. We conclude that there is a significant risk of overdiagnosis in the included randomised trials on cancer screening. We found that trials were generally not designed to estimate overdiagnosis and many trials had high risk of biases that may draw the estimates of overdiagnosis towards the null. In effect, the true extent of overdiagnosis due to cancer screening is likely underestimated.

KW - Cancer

KW - Overdiagnosis

KW - Screening

U2 - 10.1016/j.canep.2023.102352

DO - 10.1016/j.canep.2023.102352

M3 - Review

C2 - 36963292

AN - SCOPUS:85150836338

VL - 84

JO - Cancer Epidemiology

JF - Cancer Epidemiology

SN - 1877-7821

M1 - 102352

ER -

ID: 366724213