CT Colonography Rates Bolstered by US Preventive Service Task Force Recommendation

A new Harvey L. Neiman Health Policy Institute study found a 50% increase in screening computed tomography colonography (CTC) rates after the U.S. Preventive Services Task Force (USPSTF) announcement of the updated recommendation on colorectal cancer screening in 2016. This American Journal of Preventive Medicine study evaluated the association among the updated recommendation, patient cost sharing, and the uptake of colorectal cancer screening through CTC in the privately insured population.  

The Affordable Care Act (ACA) of 2010 mandated private health plans to fully cover the services recommended by the U.S. Preventive Services Task Force. In June 2016, the Task Force added CTC to its list of recommended tests for colorectal cancer screening. Prior to the recommendation, CTC rates had remained steady from 2010 to 2016 despite significant declines in the percentage of the screenings subject to patient cost sharing from 38.2% to 10.2% over that period.

“The recommendation could have impacted screening CTC in two ways. First, the recommendation and associated publicity signals evidence of CTC’s effectiveness, potentially leading to increased service demand,” said first author Steve Chen, MSPH, former graduate student at the Emory University Rollins School of Public Health. “Second, the recommendation triggered the ACA’s requirement that nongrandfathered health plans fully cover screening CTC without patient cost sharing by 2018.”

Mr. Chen and team used IBM MarketScan commercial claims data to determine the monthly screening CTC usage rates in privately insured patients aged 50−64 years from 2010 – 2018. During the 9-year study period, 3,773 screening CTC procedures were observed in a sample of 31,224,941 individuals. Despite the reduced patient cost sharing through 2016, the monthly utilization remained nearly constant at 0.4 procedures per 100,000 individuals. The rate increased to 0.6 procedures per 100,000 immediately after the recommendation, with no further increase after the ACA deadline. Given that colorectal cancer screening by CTC is recommended to be repeated every 5 years in average-risk individuals, the observed utilization increase translates to approximately 12 additional individuals undergoing colorectal cancer screening by CTC per 100,000.  

“In an environment of already largely eliminated patient cost sharing, the release of supportive evidence-based recommendations by a recognized credible body was associated with an immediate increase in CTC use for colorectal cancer screening,” said senior author Michal Horný, PhD, assistant professor at Emory University School of Medicine. “The results of our study support the power of evidence-based recommendations to impact cancer screening rates among the U.S. privately insured population.”

 

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