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In 2021, approximately 15,000 men in Germany died from prostate cancer (PCa). The national health policy is considering shifting from annual digital rectal examination (DRE)-based screening to an age-related prostate-specific antigen (PSA)-based risk-adapted and organized screening strategy. Our research investigated the cost–utility of the current DRE-based strategy versus organized age-related PSA-based risk-adaptive PCa screening strategies in Germany.
Methods
We adapted the Swedish Prostata model to the German context, recalibrating it with PCa clinical and epidemiological data from the national and state registries. The model includes preclinical and clinical disease health states defined by tumor, nodal, and metastatic stages and Gleason scores, and assumes that the benefits of screening arise from stage shift. We assessed the cost–utility of 14 strategies, ranging from no screening to DRE, and age-related, PSA-based, risk-adapted screening. Health state utility values and test characteristics were sourced from the literature. Inpatient and outpatient care costs were derived from the German diagnostic-related groups and uniform-based valuation systems.
Results
Among all strategies evaluated and compared with no screening, the “DRE only” strategy led to substantial overdiagnosis, the highest incremental cost, and minimal quality-adjusted life years (QALY) gains. PSA testing starting at 50 to 60 years with reflex MRI for PSA greater than 3 ng/mL cases followed by combined systemic and targeted biopsy reduced the number of biopsies and overdiagnosis by 75 percent and 26 percent, albeit for fewer QALYs and higher costs (dominated) than the same strategy without reflex MRI. The PSA-based risk-adaptive strategy, starting at 50 to 60 years without reflex MRI, demonstrated an 85 percent probability of being cost effective within the EUR30,000 (USD32,211) to EUR100,000 (USD107,369)/QALY willingness-to-pay range.
Conclusions
While Germany’s HTA emphasizes clinically added benefits and health-related quality of life, cost-effectiveness analysis substantiates this evidence. As a standalone early detection tool, DRE leads to substantial overdiagnosis, unnecessary biopsies, and increased healthcare costs. Overall, this study demonstrated the importance of age-related PSA risk-adaptive PCa screening. The value of MRI deserves further investigation, considering MRI’s positive effect on screening acceptability.
This introductory chapter briefly outlines the main theme of this volume, namely, to review the new opportunities and risks of digital healthcare from various disciplinary perspectives. These perspectives include law, public policy, organisational studies, and applied ethics. Based on this interdisciplinary approach, we hope that effective strategies may arise to ensure that benefits of this ongoing revolution are deployed in a responsible and sustainable manner. The second part of the chapter comprises a brief review of the four parts and fourteen substantive chapters that make up this volume.
The emergence of digital platforms and the new application economy are transforming healthcare and creating new opportunities and risks for all stakeholders in the medical ecosystem. Many of these developments rely heavily on data and AI algorithms to prevent, diagnose, treat, and monitor diseases and other health conditions. A broad range of medical, ethical and legal knowledge is now required to navigate this highly complex and fast-changing space. This collection brings together scholars from medicine and law, but also ethics, management, philosophy, and computer science, to examine current and future technological, policy and regulatory issues. In particular, the book addresses the challenge of integrating data protection and privacy concerns into the design of emerging healthcare products and services. With a number of comparative case studies, the book offers a high-level, global, and interdisciplinary perspective on the normative and policy dilemmas raised by the proliferation of information technologies in a healthcare context.
To determine if triiodothyronine alters lactate, glucose, and pyruvate metabolism, and if serum pyruvate concentration could serve as a predictor of low cardiac output syndrome in children after cardiopulmonary bypass procedures.
Methods:
This study was ancillary to the Oral Triiodothyronine for Infants and Children undergoing Cardiopulmonary bypass (OTICC) trial. Serum pyruvate was measured in the first 48 patients and lactate and glucose were measured in all 208 patients enrolled in the OTICC study on the induction of anaesthesia, 1 and 24 hours post-aortic cross-clamp removal. Patients were also defined as having low cardiac output syndrome according to the OTICC trial protocol.
Result:
Amongst the designated patient population for pyruvate analysis, 22 received placebo, and 26 received triiodothyronine (T3). Lactate concentrations were nearly 20 times greater than pyruvate. Lactate and pyruvate levels were not significantly different between T3 and placebo group. Glucose levels were significantly higher in the placebo group mainly at 24-hour post-cross-clamp removal. Additionally, lactate and glucose levels peaked at 1-hour post-cross-clamp removal in low cardiac output syndrome and non-low cardiac output syndrome patients, but subsequently decreased at a slower rate in low cardiac output syndrome. Lactate and pyruvate concentrations correlated with glucose only prior to surgery.
Conclusion:
Thyroid supplementation does not alter systemic lactate/pyruvate metabolism after cardiopulmonary bypass and reperfusion. Pyruvate levels are not useful for predicting low cardiac output syndrome. Increased blood glucose may be regarded as a response to hypermetabolic stress, seen mostly in patients with low cardiac output syndrome.
This article explores the pattern of land rents and agricultural productivity across nineteenth-century Prussia to gain new insights on the causes of the “Little Divergence” between European regions. We argue that agriculture reacted to urban and industrial development rather than shaping it. In the spirit of Johann von Thünen and Ernst Engel, we develop a theoretical model to test how access to urban demand affected agricultural development. We show that the effect of urban demand is causal and that it is in line with recent findings on a limited degree of interregional market integration in nineteenth-century Prussia.
In recent years capnography has gained a foothold in the medical field and is fast becoming a standard of care in anaesthesiology and critical care medicine. In addition, newer applications have emerged which have expanded the utility of capnographs in a number of medical disciplines. This new edition of the definitive text on capnography reviews every aspect of this valuable diagnostic technique. An introductory section summarises the basic physiology of carbon dioxide generation and transport in the body. A technical section describes how the instruments work, and a comprehensive clinical section reviews the use of capnography to diagnose a wide range of clinical disorders. Edited by the world experts in the technique, and with over 40 specialist contributors, Capnography, second edition, is the most comprehensive review available on the application of capnography in health care.