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Endoscopic Surveillance of Intestinal Metaplasia of the Esophagogastric Junction: A Decision Modeling Analysis.

Ji Yoon YoonFrancesca LimShailja C ShahJoel H RubensteinJulian A AbramsDavid A KatzkaJohn M InadomiMichelle K KimChin Hur
Published in: The American journal of gastroenterology (2024)
Cost-effectiveness of endoscopic surveillance depended on the progression rate of EGJIM to cancer. In the lowest progression rate (scenario A, 0.01%), no surveillance strategies were cost-effective. In moderate progression scenarios, one-time surveillance at 3 years was cost-effective, at $30,989 and $16,526 per QALY for scenarios B (0.05%) and C (0.12%), respectively. For scenario D (0.22%), surveillance every 5 years was cost-effective at $77,695 per QALY.Discussion:Endoscopic surveillance is costly and can cause harm, however, low-intensity longitudinal surveillance (every 5 years) is cost-effective in populations with higher EGJAC incidence. No surveillance or one-time endoscopic surveillance of patients with EGJIM was cost-effective in low-incidence populations. Future studies to better understand the natural history of EGJIM, identify risk factors for progression, and inform appropriate surveillance strategies are required.
Keyphrases
  • public health
  • ultrasound guided
  • risk factors
  • high intensity
  • squamous cell
  • data analysis