Litcius/Paper detail

Differentiated Thyroid Cancer: A Health Economic Review

Klaas Van Den Heede, Neil Tolley, Aimee N. Di Marco, Fausto Palazzo

2021Cancers32 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

The incidence of differentiated thyroid cancer (DTC) is rising, mainly because of an increased detection of asymptomatic thyroid nodularity revealed by the liberal use of thyroid ultrasound. This review aims to reflect on the health economic considerations associated with the increasing diagnosis and treatment of DTC. Overdiagnosis and the resulting overtreatment have led to more surgical procedures, increasing health care and patients' costs, and a large pool of community-dwelling thyroid cancer follow-up patients. Additionally, the cost of thyroid surgery seems to increase year on year even when inflation is taken into account. The increased healthcare costs and spending have placed significant pressure to identify potential factors associated with these increased costs. Some truly ground-breaking work in health economics has been undertaken, but more cost-effectiveness studies and micro-cost analyses are required to evaluate expenses and guide future solutions.

Topics & Concepts

OverdiagnosisThyroid cancerMedicineHealth careAsymptomaticThyroidEconomic costIntensive care medicineIncidence (geometry)Health economicsHealth care costCancerEnvironmental healthSurgeryInternal medicinePublic healthPathologyEconomicsEconomic growthOpticsNeoclassical economicsPhysicsThyroid Cancer Diagnosis and TreatmentThyroid and Parathyroid Surgery