Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
4278523 The American Journal of Surgery 2015 8 Pages PDF
Abstract

•A pancreatic cancer screening protocol is needed to catch resectable disease.•A screening protocol was chosen for high-risk groups using MRI.•Medicare and national average pricing were used for cost analysis.•Screening is affordable and should be initiated in high-risk populations.•USPSTF must rethink ratings to make screening affordable for individuals.

BackgroundPancreatic cancer is the 4th leading cause of cancer death in the United States. A screening protocol is needed to catch early-stage, resectable disease. This study suggests a protocol for high-risk individuals and assesses the cost in the context of the Affordable Care Act.MethodsMedicare and national average pricing were used for cost analysis of a protocol using magnetic resonance imaging/MRCP biannually in high-risk groups.ResultsCosts per year of life added” based on Medicare and national average costs, respectively, are as follows: $638.62 and $2,542.37 for Peutz–Jeghers syndrome, $945.33 and $3,763.44 for hereditary pancreatitis, $1,141.77 and $4,545.45 for familial pancreatic cancer and “p16-Leiden” mutations, and $356.42 and $1,418.92 for new-onset diabetes over age 50 with weight loss or smoking.ConclusionsA screening program using magnetic resonance imaging/MRCP is affordable in high-risk populations. The United States Preventive Services Task Force must re-evaluate its pancreatic cancer screening guidelines to make screening more cost-effective for the individual.

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