Abstract Background Because randomized cancer screening trials are very expensive, observational cancer screening studies can play an important role in the early phases of screening evaluation. Periodic screening evaluation (PSE) is a methodology for estimating the reduction in population cancer mortality from data on subjects who receive regularly scheduled screens. Although PSE does not require assumptions about natural history of cancer it requires other assumptions, particularly progressive detection – the assumption that once a cancer is detected by a screening test, it will always be detected by the screening test. Methods We formulate a simple version of PSE and show that it leads to an upper bound on screening efficacy if the progre...
We develop a probability model for evaluating long-term outcomes due to regular screening that incor...
Comparison of the survival of clinically detected and screen-detected cancer cases from either popul...
BACKGROUND: Evidence of the impact of breast screening is limited by biases inherent in non-randomis...
Cancer interventions often disseminate in the population before evidence of their effectiveness is a...
Background. Simulation models are essential tools for estimating benefits of cancer screening progra...
textabstractBackground: The incidence of prostate cancer has increased substantially since it became...
Estimating the natural history parameters of breast cancer not only elucidates the disease progressi...
textabstractBackground. Simulation models are essential tools for estimating benefits of cancer scre...
The long time needed to carry out experimental studies of screening for chronic diseases limits thei...
BackgroundThis study illustrates alternative statistical methods for estimating cumulative risk of s...
BACKGROUND: The optimal interval between two consecutive mammograms is uncertain. The UK Frequency T...
textabstractBACKGROUND: Screening for prostate cancer advances the time of diagnosis (lead tim...
Background. To interpret cervical cancer screening model results, we need to understand the influenc...
Background Much medical and public confusion has resulted from a review in which the authors conclud...
Background: The European randomised study of screening for prostate cancer (ERSPC) was initiated to ...
We develop a probability model for evaluating long-term outcomes due to regular screening that incor...
Comparison of the survival of clinically detected and screen-detected cancer cases from either popul...
BACKGROUND: Evidence of the impact of breast screening is limited by biases inherent in non-randomis...
Cancer interventions often disseminate in the population before evidence of their effectiveness is a...
Background. Simulation models are essential tools for estimating benefits of cancer screening progra...
textabstractBackground: The incidence of prostate cancer has increased substantially since it became...
Estimating the natural history parameters of breast cancer not only elucidates the disease progressi...
textabstractBackground. Simulation models are essential tools for estimating benefits of cancer scre...
The long time needed to carry out experimental studies of screening for chronic diseases limits thei...
BackgroundThis study illustrates alternative statistical methods for estimating cumulative risk of s...
BACKGROUND: The optimal interval between two consecutive mammograms is uncertain. The UK Frequency T...
textabstractBACKGROUND: Screening for prostate cancer advances the time of diagnosis (lead tim...
Background. To interpret cervical cancer screening model results, we need to understand the influenc...
Background Much medical and public confusion has resulted from a review in which the authors conclud...
Background: The European randomised study of screening for prostate cancer (ERSPC) was initiated to ...
We develop a probability model for evaluating long-term outcomes due to regular screening that incor...
Comparison of the survival of clinically detected and screen-detected cancer cases from either popul...
BACKGROUND: Evidence of the impact of breast screening is limited by biases inherent in non-randomis...