Screening for Celiac Disease in Childhood: Cost-effectiveness of Multiple Genetic and Serological Testing Approaches

  • Jani Mäkinen
  • , Paula Heikkilä
  • , Juha Pajula
  • , Khaoula El Mekkaoui
  • , Ketil Størdal
  • , Katri Lindfors
  • , Jutta E. Laiho
  • , Jukka Ranta
  • , Jyri Rökman
  • , Heikki Hyöty
  • , Frank Emmert-Streib
  • , Kalle Kurppa
  • , Laura Kivelä*
  • *Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleScientificpeer-review

Abstract

Background & Aims Celiac disease is severely underdiagnosed, and many identified patients suffer from a long diagnostic delay. Population-based screening could improve this under-recognition, but its practical implementation remains unclear. We studied the most cost-effective screening strategy for celiac disease in childhood. Methods A Markov model using primarily Swedish data was developed for comparing the cost-effectiveness of various scenarios. Key considerations included serological testing across ages 3 to 18 years, single-time vs repeated screening, and preliminary genetic testing to identify the at-risk population. Outcomes of the resulting 272 strategies were compared against a no-screening alternative using the incremental cost-effectiveness ratio. Sensitivity analysis was conducted at a €20,000 willingness to pay threshold to determine key factors influencing the optimal screening age(s) and conditions where repeated screening would be preferred. Results Untargeted single-time screening was more cost-effective than repeated screening or the combined use of genetic testing in the default scenario. Single-time screening was most cost-effective at age 11 (95% confidence interval, 10–14 years), and repeated screening at ages 4 and 11. Repeated screening was preferred if prevalence of celiac disease at age 12 was ≥5%, diagnosis improved quality of life for asymptomatic patients, screening costs were halved, or a willingness to pay of €50,000 per quality-adjusted life year was adopted. Diagnostic delay was the key factor influencing the optimal screening age(s). Conclusions The most cost-effective screening strategy for celiac disease was single-time untargeted serological testing at age 11. The optimal approach is affected by regional factors and may evolve with new evidence. Repeated screening may be preferable for high-risk groups and with high willingness to pay.

Original languageEnglish
JournalClinical Gastroenterology and Hepatology
DOIs
Publication statusE-pub ahead of print - 2025
MoE publication typeA1 Journal article-refereed

Funding

Funding This project received funding from the European Union’s Horizon 2020 Research and Innovation Program under grant agreement No. 874864 HEDIMED, the Sigrid Jusélius Foundation , the Foundation for Pediatric Research , the Paulo Foundation , the Research Council of Finland ( 361421 , 347474 ), the Finnish Medical Foundation ( 7850 ), the Emil Aaltonen Foundation , and the State funding for university-level health research, Tampere University Hospital, Wellbeing Services County of Pirkanmaa.

Keywords

  • Cost-utility Analysis
  • Health Economics
  • Pediatric Screening
  • Preventive Health Care

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