7 results on '"Joachim Worthington"'
Search Results
2. Trends in colon and rectal cancer mortality in Australia from 1972 to 2015 and associated projections to 2040
- Author
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Qingwei Luo, Jie-Bin Lew, Julia Steinberg, Joachim Worthington, Xue Qin Yu, Michael Caruana, Isabelle Soerjomataram, Freddie Bray, Sheena Lawrance, Maria Arcorace, Dianne L. O’Connell, Karen Canfell, and Eleonora Feletto
- Subjects
Medicine ,Science - Abstract
Abstract Previously published sub-site Australian projections for colon and rectal cancers to 2035 using the World Health Organization’s mortality database sourced from the Australian Bureau of Statistics (ABS) predicted mortality rate decreases for colon cancer and increases for rectal cancer. There are complexities related to the interpretation of ABS’s Australian colon and rectal cancer mortality rates, which could lead to possible inaccuracies in mortality rates for these sub-sites. The largest Australian population-wide registry, New South Wales Cancer Registry (NSWCR), compares routinely-reported causes of death with the recorded medical history from multiple data sources. Therefore, this study used the NSWCR data to project mortality rates for colon and rectal cancers separately to 2040 in Australia. The mortality rates for colon cancer are projected to continuously decline over the period 2015–2040, from 7.0 to 4.7 per 100,000 males, and from 5.3 to 3.2 per 100,000 females. Similar decreasing trends in mortality rates for rectal cancer were projected over the period 2015–2040, from 4.9 to 3.7 per 100,000 males, and from 2.6 to 2.3 per 100,000 females. These projections provide benchmark estimates for the colorectal cancer burden in Australia against which the effectiveness of cancer control interventions can be measured.
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- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. A modelled evaluation of the impact of COVID-19 on breast, bowel, and cervical cancer screening programmes in Australia
- Author
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Carolyn Nickson, Megan A Smith, Eleonora Feletto, Louiza S Velentzis, Kate Broun, Sabine Deij, Paul Grogan, Michaela Hall, Emily He, D James St John, Jie-Bin Lew, Pietro Procopio, Kate T Simms, Joachim Worthington, G Bruce Mann, and Karen Canfell
- Subjects
cancer screening ,breast cancer ,cervical cancer ,colorectal cancer ,COVID-19 ,Medicine ,Science ,Biology (General) ,QH301-705.5 - Abstract
Australia introduced COVID-19 infection prevention and control measures in early 2020. To help prepare health services, the Australian Government Department of Health commissioned a modelled evaluation of the impact of disruptions to population breast, bowel, and cervical cancer screening programmes on cancer outcomes and cancer services. We used the Policy1 modelling platforms to predict outcomes for potential disruptions to cancer screening participation, covering periods of 3, 6, 9, and 12 mo. We estimated missed screens, clinical outcomes (cancer incidence, tumour staging), and various diagnostic service impacts. We found that a 12-mo screening disruption would reduce breast cancer diagnoses (9.3% population-level reduction over 2020–2021) and colorectal cancer (up to 12.1% reduction over 2020–21), and increase cervical cancer diagnoses (up to 3.6% over 2020–2022), with upstaging expected for these cancer types (2, 1.4, and 6.8% for breast, cervical, and colorectal cancers, respectively). Findings for 6–12-mo disruption scenarios illustrate that maintaining screening participation is critical to preventing an increase in the burden of cancer at a population level. We provide programme-specific insights into which outcomes are expected to change, when changes are likely to become apparent, and likely downstream impacts. This evaluation provided evidence to guide decision-making for screening programmes and emphasises the ongoing benefits of maintaining screening in the face of potential future disruptions.
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- 2023
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- View/download PDF
4. Health system costs and days in hospital for colorectal cancer patients in New South Wales, Australia.
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David E Goldsbury, Eleonora Feletto, Marianne F Weber, Philip Haywood, Alison Pearce, Jie-Bin Lew, Joachim Worthington, Emily He, Julia Steinberg, Dianne L O'Connell, and Karen Canfell
- Subjects
Medicine ,Science - Abstract
IntroductionColorectal cancer (CRC) care costs the Australian healthcare system more than any other cancer. We estimated costs and days in hospital for CRC cases, stratified by site (colon/rectal cancer) and disease stage, to inform detailed analyses of CRC-related healthcare.MethodsIncident CRC patients were identified using the Australian 45 and Up Study cohort linked with cancer registry records. We analysed linked hospital admission records, emergency department records, and reimbursement records for government-subsidised medical services and prescription medicines. Cases' health system costs (2020 Australian dollars) and hospital days were compared with those for cancer-free controls (matched by age, sex, geography, smoking) to estimate excess resources by phase of care, analysed by sociodemographic, health, and disease characteristics.Results1200 colon and 546 rectal cancer cases were diagnosed 2006-2013, and followed up to June 2016. Eighty-nine percent of cases had surgery, chemotherapy or radiotherapy, and excess costs were predominantly for hospitalisations. Initial phase (12 months post-diagnosis) mean excess health system costs were $50,434 for colon and $60,877 for rectal cancer cases, with means of 16 and 18.5 excess hospital days, respectively. The annual continuing mean excess costs were $6,779 (colon) and $8,336 (rectal), with a mean of 2 excess hospital days each. Resources utilised (costs and days) in these phases increased with more advanced disease, comorbidities, and younger age. Mean excess costs in the year before death were $74,952 (colon) and $67,733 (rectal), with means of 34 and 30 excess hospital days, respectively-resources utilised were similar across all characteristics, apart from lower costs for cases aged ≥75 at diagnosis.ConclusionsHealth system costs and hospital utilisation for CRC care are greater for people with more advanced disease. These findings provide a benchmark, and will help inform future cost-effectiveness analyses of potential approaches to CRC screening and treatment.
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- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Improving Australian National Bowel Cancer Screening Program outcomes through increased participation and cost-effective investment.
- Author
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Joachim Worthington, Jie-Bin Lew, Eleonora Feletto, Carol A Holden, Daniel L Worthley, Caroline Miller, and Karen Canfell
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Medicine ,Science - Abstract
BACKGROUND:The Australian National Bowel Cancer Screening Program (NBCSP) provides biennial immunochemical faecal occult blood test (iFOBT) screening for people aged 50-74 years. Previous work has quantified the number of colorectal cancer (CRC) deaths prevented by the NBCSP and has shown that it is cost-effective. With a 40% screening participation rate, the NBCSP is currently underutilised and could be improved by increasing program participation, but the maximum appropriate level of spending on effective interventions to increase adherence has not yet been quantified. OBJECTIVES:To estimate (i) reductions in CRC cases and deaths for 2020-2040 attributable to, and (ii) the threshold for cost-effective investment (TCEI) in, effective future interventions to improve participation in the NBCSP. METHODS:A comprehensive microsimulation model, Policy1-Bowel, was used to simulate CRC natural history and screening in Australia, considering currently reported NBCSP adherence rates, i.e. iFOBT participation (∼40%) and diagnostic colonoscopy assessment rates (∼70%). Australian residents aged 40-74 were modelled. We evaluated three scenarios: (1) diagnostic colonoscopy assessment increasing to 90%; (2) iFOBT screening participation increasing to 60% by 2020, 70% by 2030 with diagnostic assessment rates of 90%; and (3) iFOBT screening increasing to 90% by 2020 with diagnostic assessment rates of 90%. In each scenario, we estimated CRC incidence and mortality, colonoscopies, costs, and TCEI given indicative willingness-to-pay thresholds of AUD$10,000-$30,000/LYS. RESULTS:By 2040, age-standardised CRC incidence and mortality rates could be reduced from 46.2 and 13.5 per 100,000 persons, respectively, if current participation rates continued, to (1) 44.0 and 12.7, (2) 36.8 and 8.8, and (3) 31.9 and 6.5. In Scenario 2, 23,000 lives would be saved from 2020-2040 vs current participation rates. The estimated scenario-specific TCEI (Australian dollars or AUD$/year) to invest in interventions to increase participation, given a conservative willingness-to-pay threshold of AUD$10,000/LYS, was (1) AUD$14.9M, (2) AUD$72.0M, and (3) AUD$76.5M. CONCLUSION:Significant investment in evidence-based interventions could be used to improve NBCSP adherence and help realise the program's potential. Such interventions might include mass media campaigns to increase program participation, educational or awareness interventions for practitioners, and/or interventions resulting in improvements in referral pathways. Any set of interventions which achieves at least 70% iFOBT screening participation and a 90% diagnostic assessment rate while costing under AUD$72 million annually would be highly cost-effective (
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. Health system costs and days in hospital for colorectal cancer patients in New South Wales, Australia
- Author
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Eleonora Feletto, Dianne L. O'Connell, Marianne Weber, Joachim Worthington, Jie-Bin Lew, Karen Canfell, Emily He, David Goldsbury, Alison Pearce, Julia Steinberg, and Philip Haywood
- Subjects
Databases, Factual ,Economics ,Colorectal cancer ,Cost-Benefit Analysis ,Cancer Treatment ,Social Sciences ,Metastasis ,Basic Cancer Research ,Health care ,Medicine and Health Sciences ,Registries ,Reimbursement ,Multidisciplinary ,Hospital Records ,Hospitals ,Government Programs ,Hospitalization ,Benchmarking ,Oncology ,Government ,Cohort ,Medicine ,New South Wales ,Anatomy ,Colorectal Neoplasms ,Research Article ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Colon ,General Science & Technology ,Science ,Rectal Cancer ,Health Economics ,Diagnostic Medicine ,Gastrointestinal Tumors ,Cancer Detection and Diagnosis ,medicine ,Humans ,Medical prescription ,Colorectal Cancer ,Medical Assistance ,business.industry ,Rectum ,Cancers and Neoplasms ,Biology and Life Sciences ,Cancer ,Emergency department ,Length of Stay ,medicine.disease ,Cancer registry ,Gastrointestinal Tract ,Health Care ,Emergency medicine ,Health Facilities ,business ,Digestive System ,Health Insurance - Abstract
Introduction Colorectal cancer (CRC) care costs the Australian healthcare system more than any other cancer. We estimated costs and days in hospital for CRC cases, stratified by site (colon/rectal cancer) and disease stage, to inform detailed analyses of CRC-related healthcare. Methods Incident CRC patients were identified using the Australian 45 and Up Study cohort linked with cancer registry records. We analysed linked hospital admission records, emergency department records, and reimbursement records for government-subsidised medical services and prescription medicines. Cases’ health system costs (2020 Australian dollars) and hospital days were compared with those for cancer-free controls (matched by age, sex, geography, smoking) to estimate excess resources by phase of care, analysed by sociodemographic, health, and disease characteristics. Results 1200 colon and 546 rectal cancer cases were diagnosed 2006–2013, and followed up to June 2016. Eighty-nine percent of cases had surgery, chemotherapy or radiotherapy, and excess costs were predominantly for hospitalisations. Initial phase (12 months post-diagnosis) mean excess health system costs were $50,434 for colon and $60,877 for rectal cancer cases, with means of 16 and 18.5 excess hospital days, respectively. The annual continuing mean excess costs were $6,779 (colon) and $8,336 (rectal), with a mean of 2 excess hospital days each. Resources utilised (costs and days) in these phases increased with more advanced disease, comorbidities, and younger age. Mean excess costs in the year before death were $74,952 (colon) and $67,733 (rectal), with means of 34 and 30 excess hospital days, respectively–resources utilised were similar across all characteristics, apart from lower costs for cases aged ≥75 at diagnosis. Conclusions Health system costs and hospital utilisation for CRC care are greater for people with more advanced disease. These findings provide a benchmark, and will help inform future cost-effectiveness analyses of potential approaches to CRC screening and treatment.
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. Improving Australian National Bowel Cancer Screening Program outcomes through increased participation and cost-effective investment
- Author
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Eleonora Feletto, Karen Canfell, Carol A Holden, Daniel L. Worthley, Jie-Bin Lew, Joachim Worthington, and Caroline Miller
- Subjects
Male ,Colorectal cancer ,Cost-Benefit Analysis ,Psychological intervention ,Colonoscopy ,Geographical Locations ,Feces ,0302 clinical medicine ,Cancer screening ,Medicine and Health Sciences ,Medicine ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Early Detection of Cancer ,Multidisciplinary ,Cost–benefit analysis ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,Mortality rate ,Incidence (epidemiology) ,Middle Aged ,Adenomas ,Intestines ,Oncology ,Occult Blood ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Comparators ,Colonic Neoplasms ,Engineering and Technology ,Female ,Colorectal Neoplasms ,Cancer Screening ,Research Article ,Referral ,Death Rates ,Science ,Oceania ,Surgical and Invasive Medical Procedures ,Digestive System Procedures ,03 medical and health sciences ,Population Metrics ,Diagnostic Medicine ,Environmental health ,Cancer Detection and Diagnosis ,Humans ,Aged ,Colorectal Cancer ,Population Biology ,business.industry ,Australia ,Cancers and Neoplasms ,Biology and Life Sciences ,medicine.disease ,People and Places ,Electronics ,business - Abstract
Background The Australian National Bowel Cancer Screening Program (NBCSP) provides biennial immunochemical faecal occult blood test (iFOBT) screening for people aged 50–74 years. Previous work has quantified the number of colorectal cancer (CRC) deaths prevented by the NBCSP and has shown that it is cost-effective. With a 40% screening participation rate, the NBCSP is currently underutilised and could be improved by increasing program participation, but the maximum appropriate level of spending on effective interventions to increase adherence has not yet been quantified. Objectives To estimate (i) reductions in CRC cases and deaths for 2020–2040 attributable to, and (ii) the threshold for cost-effective investment (TCEI) in, effective future interventions to improve participation in the NBCSP. Methods A comprehensive microsimulation model, Policy1-Bowel, was used to simulate CRC natural history and screening in Australia, considering currently reported NBCSP adherence rates, i.e. iFOBT participation (∼40%) and diagnostic colonoscopy assessment rates (∼70%). Australian residents aged 40–74 were modelled. We evaluated three scenarios: (1) diagnostic colonoscopy assessment increasing to 90%; (2) iFOBT screening participation increasing to 60% by 2020, 70% by 2030 with diagnostic assessment rates of 90%; and (3) iFOBT screening increasing to 90% by 2020 with diagnostic assessment rates of 90%. In each scenario, we estimated CRC incidence and mortality, colonoscopies, costs, and TCEI given indicative willingness-to-pay thresholds of AUD$10,000-$30,000/LYS. Results By 2040, age-standardised CRC incidence and mortality rates could be reduced from 46.2 and 13.5 per 100,000 persons, respectively, if current participation rates continued, to (1) 44.0 and 12.7, (2) 36.8 and 8.8, and (3) 31.9 and 6.5. In Scenario 2, 23,000 lives would be saved from 2020–2040 vs current participation rates. The estimated scenario-specific TCEI (Australian dollars or AUD$/year) to invest in interventions to increase participation, given a conservative willingness-to-pay threshold of AUD$10,000/LYS, was (1) AUD$14.9M, (2) AUD$72.0M, and (3) AUD$76.5M. Conclusion Significant investment in evidence-based interventions could be used to improve NBCSP adherence and help realise the program’s potential. Such interventions might include mass media campaigns to increase program participation, educational or awareness interventions for practitioners, and/or interventions resulting in improvements in referral pathways. Any set of interventions which achieves at least 70% iFOBT screening participation and a 90% diagnostic assessment rate while costing under AUD$72 million annually would be highly cost-effective (
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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