Theory and methods
Patient follow up screening evaluations. Examples with regard to
congenital hip dislocation and congenital heart disease
R E Juttmanna, J Hessb, G J van Oortmarssena, P J van der Maasa
a Department
of Public Health, Erasmus University Rotterdam, the Netherlands, b Department of Paediatric Cardiology, the
Sophia Children's Hospital and Erasmus University Rotterdam
Correspondence to: Dr Juttmann, Department of Public Health, Erasmus University Rotterdam, Room EE 2008, PO Box 1738, 3000 DR Rotterdam, the Netherlands (juttmann{at}mgz.fgg.eur.nl)
Accepted for publication 5 October 2000
OBJECTIVE
To discuss
the merits of the patient follow up study design for the evaluation of
some specific mass screening programmes.
DESIGN
Theoretical
evaluation illustrated by two examples.
SETTING
Department of
Public Health Erasmus University Rotterdam.
MAIN RESULTS
The gold
standard for evaluation of favourable effects of screening is the
randomised controlled trial (RCT). Application of an RCT, however, is
often not feasible, in which cases observational studies will have
to be relied on. The case-control study design is generally considered
to be second best. In some situations, however, a patient follow up
study design may be applicable and may have some major advantages. The
use of the patient follow up design for screening evaluation will often
be very problematic or even unacceptable, particularly as far as
screening for cancer is concerned. The most important objections are
resulting from lead time bias, length bias, selection bias and
over-treatment bias. For the evaluation of screening for congenital
heart disease and congenital hip dislocation in Dutch child health
care, however, these objections may relatively simply be overcome. Lead
time bias will be of little importance, as the ages of onset of these disorders are fixed, namely at birth, and their ultimate outcomes may
be expected within relatively short time. Length bias may largely be
avoided by correction for severity of the disorder, which can be
adequately assessed by modern diagnostic procedures. Selection bias is
generally hard to rule out, but in these cases it probably plays a
minor part. Over-treatment can be avoided by the policy of "watchful
waiting", which in these disorders can be applied with little risk
for fatal outcomes. In principle bias might be avoided more
successfully in a case-control screening evaluation than in a patient
follow up study. However, the patient follow up study is for both
screening programmes discussed here the more feasible design and can
provide more supplementary information. The results of two example
studies suggest that both screenings probably yield considerable
benefits
CONCLUSION
Under a
number of specific conditions a patient follow up study is an efficient
alternative to more customary designs for screening evaluation.
Keywords: screening; effect evaluation; study design
© 2001 by Journal of Epidemiology and Community Health
This article has been cited by other articles:
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Bunge, E. M., de Koning, H. J.
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Bunge, E. M., Juttmann, R. E., van Biezen, F. C., Creemers, H., Hazebroek-Kampschreur, A. A. J. M., Luttmer, B. C. F., Wiegersma, P. A., de Koning, H. J., for the Netherlands Evaluation Study on Screening,
(2008). Estimating the Effectiveness of Screening for Scoliosis: A Case-Control Study. Pediatrics
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[Abstract] [Full Text]
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