Screening to identify people with type 2 diabetes at risk of liver cancer in primary care - a randomised controlled trial PROTOCOL
Screening to identify people with type 2 diabetes at risk of liver cancer in primary care - a randomised controlled trial PROTOCOL
Introduction: hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) is expected to become the third most common cause of cancer death worldwide by 2030. The increase in HCC is in large part due to the rising prevalence of risk factors such as type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM). Up to 1 in 20 people living with T2DM have liver cirrhosis, and they have a 1% to 2% incidence of HCC per year. Patients with cirrhosis enter surveillance for HCC to identify early-stage, curable tumours. A diagnosis of T2DM does not mandate testing to identify patients with cirrhosis, with testing restricted to those with additional risks. There has never been a trial and nested cost-effectiveness evaluation comparing screening all patients with T2DM for cirrhosis against usual care.
Methods and analysis: the study will use a multi-centre, unblinded individual randomised controlled trial design. The aim will be to determine the effectiveness and cost-effectiveness of screening all adults with T2DM to identify those at high risk of HCC. The recruitment strategy has been supported by patient and public involvement (PPI). Participants will be identified via an automated search of primary care records and invited to participate via text. 320 participants will be randomised for screening. The screening will include measurement of bio-markers for liver fibrosis (ELF and Fib-4) and vibration-controlled transient elastography. Another 320 participants will be randomised to standard care. Demographic and medical history data will be collected at baseline from all participants. Outcome data will be collected remotely from healthcare records. The primary outcome is the proportion of participants in each arm who are referred to HCC surveillance following testing for liver disease within 12 months of randomisation. The results will be used to calculate the incremental cost-effectiveness ratio of screening via a Markov model.
Ethics and dissemination: the results of this study will be presented directly to National Health Service England. Additional dissemination via conference proceedings and publication will be supported by our PPI team. Ethical approval was granted by the West of Scotland Research Ethics Service on 2 August 2023, REC reference 23/WS/0102.
Trial registration number: ISRCTN17017677.
Diabetes & endocrinology, Health Care Costs, Hepatobiliary tumours, Hepatology, Randomised Controlled Trial
e088043
Buchanan, Ryan M.
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Reinson, Tina
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Bilson, Josh
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Woodland, Hazel
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Nwoguh, Chinonso
c7a571c6-a4a8-4b41-bb9b-dada57e946a8
Cooper, Keith
ea064f58-d71d-404a-bcf3-49d243b8825b
Harris, Scott
19ea097b-df15-4f0f-be19-8ac42c190028
Malone, Karen
cf2f2395-19fd-4f7b-b661-e63dd76b0531
Byrne, Chris
1370b997-cead-4229-83a7-53301ed2a43c
6 March 2025
Buchanan, Ryan M.
9499f713-f684-4046-be29-83cd9d6f834d
Reinson, Tina
56ab6d3b-7526-45c5-8040-61521c8edcdf
Bilson, Josh
a99f9320-335c-47c8-bf30-07df48a5467d
Woodland, Hazel
aeb359be-51cb-4042-bf91-4197e15f995b
Nwoguh, Chinonso
c7a571c6-a4a8-4b41-bb9b-dada57e946a8
Cooper, Keith
ea064f58-d71d-404a-bcf3-49d243b8825b
Harris, Scott
19ea097b-df15-4f0f-be19-8ac42c190028
Malone, Karen
cf2f2395-19fd-4f7b-b661-e63dd76b0531
Byrne, Chris
1370b997-cead-4229-83a7-53301ed2a43c
Buchanan, Ryan M., Reinson, Tina, Bilson, Josh, Woodland, Hazel, Nwoguh, Chinonso, Cooper, Keith, Harris, Scott, Malone, Karen and Byrne, Chris
(2025)
Screening to identify people with type 2 diabetes at risk of liver cancer in primary care - a randomised controlled trial PROTOCOL.
BMJ Open, 15 (3), , [e088043].
(doi:10.1136/bmjopen-2024-088043).
Abstract
Introduction: hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) is expected to become the third most common cause of cancer death worldwide by 2030. The increase in HCC is in large part due to the rising prevalence of risk factors such as type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM). Up to 1 in 20 people living with T2DM have liver cirrhosis, and they have a 1% to 2% incidence of HCC per year. Patients with cirrhosis enter surveillance for HCC to identify early-stage, curable tumours. A diagnosis of T2DM does not mandate testing to identify patients with cirrhosis, with testing restricted to those with additional risks. There has never been a trial and nested cost-effectiveness evaluation comparing screening all patients with T2DM for cirrhosis against usual care.
Methods and analysis: the study will use a multi-centre, unblinded individual randomised controlled trial design. The aim will be to determine the effectiveness and cost-effectiveness of screening all adults with T2DM to identify those at high risk of HCC. The recruitment strategy has been supported by patient and public involvement (PPI). Participants will be identified via an automated search of primary care records and invited to participate via text. 320 participants will be randomised for screening. The screening will include measurement of bio-markers for liver fibrosis (ELF and Fib-4) and vibration-controlled transient elastography. Another 320 participants will be randomised to standard care. Demographic and medical history data will be collected at baseline from all participants. Outcome data will be collected remotely from healthcare records. The primary outcome is the proportion of participants in each arm who are referred to HCC surveillance following testing for liver disease within 12 months of randomisation. The results will be used to calculate the incremental cost-effectiveness ratio of screening via a Markov model.
Ethics and dissemination: the results of this study will be presented directly to National Health Service England. Additional dissemination via conference proceedings and publication will be supported by our PPI team. Ethical approval was granted by the West of Scotland Research Ethics Service on 2 August 2023, REC reference 23/WS/0102.
Trial registration number: ISRCTN17017677.
Text
REFLEX_Protocol_V9_clean
- Accepted Manuscript
Text
e088043.full
- Version of Record
More information
Accepted/In Press date: 7 February 2025
e-pub ahead of print date: 6 March 2025
Published date: 6 March 2025
Additional Information:
Ryan M Buchanan*, Tina Reinson*, Josh Bilson, Hazel Woodland, Chinonso Nwoguh, Keith Cooper, Scott Harris, Karen Malone, Christopher D Byrne. Screening to identify people with type 2 diabetes at risk of liver cancer in primary care - a randomised controlled trial PROTOCOL. BMJ Open. 2025 Feb 07 accepted. * Joint first authors
Keywords:
Diabetes & endocrinology, Health Care Costs, Hepatobiliary tumours, Hepatology, Randomised Controlled Trial
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 498929
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/498929
ISSN: 2044-6055
PURE UUID: e2a94db0-0ee5-491c-b310-61ec63115696
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Date deposited: 04 Mar 2025 18:11
Last modified: 17 Sep 2025 02:14
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Contributors
Author:
Tina Reinson
Author:
Josh Bilson
Author:
Hazel Woodland
Author:
Chinonso Nwoguh
Author:
Karen Malone
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