BMC Cancer (Aug 2020)

Monitoring and evaluation of breast cancer screening programmes: selecting candidate performance indicators

  • Sergei Muratov,
  • Carlos Canelo-Aybar,
  • Jean-Eric Tarride,
  • Pablo Alonso-Coello,
  • Nadya Dimitrova,
  • Bettina Borisch,
  • Xavier Castells,
  • Stephen W. Duffy,
  • Patricia Fitzpatrick,
  • Markus Follmann,
  • Livia Giordano,
  • Solveig Hofvind,
  • Annette Lebeau,
  • Cecily Quinn,
  • Alberto Torresin,
  • Claudia Vialli,
  • Sabine Siesling,
  • Antonio Ponti,
  • Paolo Giorgi Rossi,
  • Holger Schünemann,
  • Lennarth Nyström,
  • Mireille Broeders,
  • On behalf of the ECIBC contributor group

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s12885-020-07289-z
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 20, no. 1
pp. 1 – 10

Abstract

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Abstract Background In the scope of the European Commission Initiative on Breast Cancer (ECIBC) the Monitoring and Evaluation (M&E) subgroup was tasked to identify breast cancer screening programme (BCSP) performance indicators, including their acceptable and desirable levels, which are associated with breast cancer (BC) mortality. This paper documents the methodology used for the indicator selection. Methods The indicators were identified through a multi-stage process. First, a scoping review was conducted to identify existing performance indicators. Second, building on existing frameworks for making well-informed health care choices, a specific conceptual framework was developed to guide the indicator selection. Third, two group exercises including a rating and ranking survey were conducted for indicator selection using pre-determined criteria, such as: relevance, measurability, accurateness, ethics and understandability. The selected indicators were mapped onto a BC screening pathway developed by the M&E subgroup to illustrate the steps of BC screening common to all EU countries. Results A total of 96 indicators were identified from an initial list of 1325 indicators. After removing redundant and irrelevant indicators and adding those missing, 39 candidate indicators underwent the rating and ranking exercise. Based on the results, the M&E subgroup selected 13 indicators: screening coverage, participation rate, recall rate, breast cancer detection rate, invasive breast cancer detection rate, cancers > 20 mm, cancers ≤10 mm, lymph node status, interval cancer rate, episode sensitivity, time interval between screening and first treatment, benign open surgical biopsy rate, and mastectomy rate. Conclusion This systematic approach led to the identification of 13 BCSP candidate performance indicators to be further evaluated for their association with BC mortality.

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