Should the age range of the Dutch hrHPV-based cervical cancer screening program be broadened? A modelling study using cohort effects
Menée aux Pays-Bas à l'aide d'un modèle de microsimulation, cette étude examine l'intérêt, du point de vue du rapport coût-efficacité, d'étendre la tranche d'âge d'éligibilité au programme de dépistage du papillomavirus humain
In the Netherlands, women are invited for human papillomavirus (HPV) screening between the ages of 30 and 60 (with conditional screening at age 65). However, an increase in cervical cancer (CC) incidence has been observed in younger women recently. Meanwhile, HPV-vaccinated cohorts reached the screening age of 30 in 2023. Moreover, increasing healthy life expectancy is a consideration for screening in older age groups. Due to these developments, the starting and ending ages of the HPV screening programs should be reconsidered. Microsimulation model MISCAN-Cervix was recalibrated for cohort effects using updated CC incidence data. We used this model to calculate the cost-effectiveness of screening unvaccinated women in birth cohorts 1962–1992 until 65 years old. Additionally, we considered starting screening at 25 for partly vaccinated cohorts (born in 2002–2006). Vaccination effects were calculated using microsimulation model STDSIM. Main outcome measures included cancers prevented, life years gained (LYG), costs, and referrals compared to the current strategy (2027 onwards). Adding screening at age 65 to the current strategy leads to +3.5% cancers prevented, +10.3% referrals, +2.4% LYG and +57.0% costs (cost-effectiveness ratio: €275,096/LYG). Adding screening at age 25 results in extra cases prevented (+1.3%–5.7%, depending on the target group's vaccination status) and LYG (+0.8%–3.7%), but increases referrals (12.9%–37.1%) and costs (+14.0%–33.1%) (cost-effectiveness ratio: €120,017–€323,813/LYG). So, screening unvaccinated women at 65 years old and screening women in (partly-)vaccinated cohorts at age 25 might not represent good value for money.
International Journal of Cancer , article en libre accès 2025