TY - JOUR
T1 - Broadening risk factor or disease definition as a driver for overdiagnosis
T2 - A narrative review
AU - the Choosing Wisely Working Group of the European Federation of Internal Medicine
AU - Bandovas, João Pedro
AU - Leal, Beatriz
AU - Reis-de-Carvalho, Catarina
AU - Sousa, David Cordeiro
AU - Araújo, João Cruz
AU - Peixoto, Pedro
AU - Henriques, Susana Oliveira
AU - Vaz Carneiro, António
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2022 The Authors. Journal of Internal Medicine published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd on behalf of Association for Publication of The Journal of Internal Medicine.
PY - 2022/4
Y1 - 2022/4
N2 - Medical overuse—defined as the provision of health services for which potential harms exceed potential benefits—constitutes a paradigm of low-value care and is seen as a threat to the quality of care. Value in healthcare implies a precise definition of disease. However, defining a disease may not be straightforward since clinical data do not show discrete boundaries, calling for some clinical judgment. And, if in time a redefinition of disease is needed, it is important to recognize that it can induce overdiagnosis, the identification of medical conditions that would, otherwise, never cause any significant symptoms or lead to clinical harm. A classic example is the impact of recommendations from professional societies in the late 1990s, lowering the threshold for abnormal total cholesterol from 240 mg/dl to 200 mg/dl. Due to these changes in risk factor definition, literally overnight there were 42 million new cases eligible for treatment in the United States. The same happened with hypertension—using either the 2019 NICE guidelines or the 2018 ESC/ECC guidelines criteria for arterial hypertension, the proportion of people overdiagnosed with hypertension was calculated to be between 14% and 33%. In this review, we will start by discussing resource overuse. We then present the basis for disease definition and its conceptual problems. Finally, we will discuss the impact of changing risk factor/disease definitions in the prevalence of disease and its consequences in overdiagnosis and overtreatment (a problem particularly relevant when definitions are widened to include earlier or milder disease).
AB - Medical overuse—defined as the provision of health services for which potential harms exceed potential benefits—constitutes a paradigm of low-value care and is seen as a threat to the quality of care. Value in healthcare implies a precise definition of disease. However, defining a disease may not be straightforward since clinical data do not show discrete boundaries, calling for some clinical judgment. And, if in time a redefinition of disease is needed, it is important to recognize that it can induce overdiagnosis, the identification of medical conditions that would, otherwise, never cause any significant symptoms or lead to clinical harm. A classic example is the impact of recommendations from professional societies in the late 1990s, lowering the threshold for abnormal total cholesterol from 240 mg/dl to 200 mg/dl. Due to these changes in risk factor definition, literally overnight there were 42 million new cases eligible for treatment in the United States. The same happened with hypertension—using either the 2019 NICE guidelines or the 2018 ESC/ECC guidelines criteria for arterial hypertension, the proportion of people overdiagnosed with hypertension was calculated to be between 14% and 33%. In this review, we will start by discussing resource overuse. We then present the basis for disease definition and its conceptual problems. Finally, we will discuss the impact of changing risk factor/disease definitions in the prevalence of disease and its consequences in overdiagnosis and overtreatment (a problem particularly relevant when definitions are widened to include earlier or milder disease).
KW - changing risk factor/disease definitions
KW - disease definition
KW - low-value care
KW - overdiagnosis
KW - overtreatment
KW - resource overuse
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85127729548&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1111/joim.13465
DO - 10.1111/joim.13465
M3 - Review article
C2 - 35253285
AN - SCOPUS:85127729548
SN - 0954-6820
VL - 291
SP - 426
EP - 437
JO - Journal of Internal Medicine
JF - Journal of Internal Medicine
IS - 4
ER -