A multi-objective constrained POMDP model for breast cancer screening
Robert K. Helmeczi, Can Kavaklioglu, Mucahit Cevik, Davood, Pirayesh Neghab

TL;DR
This paper develops a multi-objective constrained POMDP model for breast cancer screening, balancing quality-adjusted life years and mortality risk, to inform policy decisions under budget constraints.
Contribution
It introduces a novel multi-objective CPOMDP framework for breast cancer screening that considers multiple screening methods and resource limitations.
Findings
Weighted objectives produce balanced QALYs and LBCMR.
Single-objective models often sacrifice one metric for minimal gains.
Supplemental screenings are rarely recommended under baseline costs and disutility.
Abstract
Breast cancer is a common and deadly disease, but it is often curable when diagnosed early. While most countries have large-scale screening programs, there is no consensus on a single globally accepted guideline for breast cancer screening. The complex nature of the disease; the limited availability of screening methods such as mammography, magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), and ultrasound; and public health policies all factor into the development of screening policies. Resource availability concerns necessitate the design of policies which conform to a budget, a problem which can be modelled as a constrained partially observable Markov decision process (CPOMDP). In this study, we propose a multi-objective CPOMDP model for breast cancer screening which allows for supplemental screening methods to accompany mammography. The model has two objectives: maximize the quality-adjusted life…
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Taxonomy
TopicsHealth Systems, Economic Evaluations, Quality of Life · Statistical Methods in Clinical Trials · Global Cancer Incidence and Screening
