# Cost-Effectiveness of Home-Based Self-Sampling vs Clinician Sampling for Anal Precancer Screening

**Authors:** Haluk Damgacioglu, Timothy L. McAuliffe, Timothy J. Ridolfi, Elizabeth Chiao, Maria E. Fernandez, Vanessa Schick, Jennifer S. Smith, Bridgett Brzezinski, Jenna Nitkowski, Ashish A. Deshmukh, Alan G. Nyitray

PMC · DOI: 10.1001/jamanetworkopen.2025.52220 · JAMA Network Open · 2026-01-05

## TL;DR

Home-based anal cancer screening is more cost-effective than clinic-based screening for increasing participation among sexual and gender minority groups in the US.

## Contribution

This study is the first to evaluate the cost-effectiveness of home-based anal cancer screening in the US for sexual and gender minority individuals.

## Key findings

- Home-based screening increased participation rates to 89.2% compared to 74.2% for clinic-based screening.
- From a societal perspective, home-based screening had an ICER of $25.19 per additional screened participant.
- Home-based screening showed a 99.99% probability of being cost-effective at a $100 willingness-to-pay threshold.

## Abstract

What is the cost-effectiveness of home-based vs clinic-based anal cancer screening in increasing screening uptake among sexual and gender minority (SGM) groups in the US?

In this economic evaluation of a randomized clinical trial involving 240 SGM men and transgender women, the incremental cost-effectiveness ratio for increased screening uptake was $132.36 from the health care payer perspective and $25.19 from the societal perspective per additional completed screening.

These findings suggest that home-based anal cancer screening is a cost-effective strategy for increasing screening participation among SGM individuals, particularly from a societal perspective, as it reduces travel and time-related costs.

This economic evaluation examines the cost-effectiveness of home-based anal self-sampling compared with clinic-based screening among sexual and gender minority individuals.

Anal cancer screening is recommended for high-risk populations, particularly sexual and gender minority (SGM) individuals. However, the cost-effectiveness of home-based self-sampling in increasing anal cancer screening uptake has not yet been evaluated in the US.

To evaluate the cost-effectiveness of home-based anal self-sampling compared with clinic-based screening among SGM individuals.

This economic evaluation used data from a 2-group randomized clinical trial conducted in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, from January 2020 to August 2022, enrolling SGM individuals aged 25 years or older. Participants were randomized to home-based self-sampling or clinic-based screening. Costs for home-based screening were obtained from the trial, and clinic-based costs were sourced from the Medicare reimbursement schedule. Travel and time costs were derived on the basis of participant self-reports. The analysis was performed between February and October 2025.

Participants in the home-based screening group received self-sampling supplies and instructions, and those in the clinic-based screening group were instructed to visit a clinic for anal cancer screening.

The primary outcome was the incremental cost-effectiveness ratio (ICER), measured as the additional cost needed to increase screening participation by one person. The 95% CIs for the ICERs were estimated using a bootstrap method with 1000 iterations. Net benefit regression and cost-effectiveness acceptability curves were used to assess the likelihood of cost-effectiveness across different willingness-to-pay (WTP) thresholds.

The study included 240 SGM individuals (227 with gender identity as a man [95%]; median [IQR] age, 46 [33 to 57] years), of whom 65 (27%) had HIV. The cost per participant was $64.18 for home-based screening and $60.40 for clinic-based screening from a societal perspective, and $61.91 for home-based screening and $42.06 for clinic-based screening from a health care payer perspective. Home-based screening was associated with increased screening participation vs clinic-based screening (107 participants [89.2%] vs 89 participants [74.2%]). The ICER per additional screened participant was $25.19 (95% CI, −$27.66 to $104.60) for the societal perspective and $132.36 (95% CI, $74.54 to $402.20) for the health care payer perspective. Home-based screening had a 49.6% probability of being cost-effective at a WTP of $25, 99.99% at a WTP of $100 (societal perspective), and 90.9% at a WTP of $200 (health care payer perspective). The ICERs for home-based screening compared with clinic-based screening were highly sensitive to screening participation rates.

The findings of this economic analysis suggest that home-based anal cancer screening is a cost-effective approach to increasing screening participation among SGM individuals. Home-based screening may serve as a valuable and efficient tool for expanding screening rates.

## Linked entities

- **Diseases:** anal cancer (MONDO:0003199)

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** Anal cancer (MESH:D001005)
- **Species:** Human immunodeficiency virus 1 (no rank) [taxon 11676], Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Full text

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## Figures

3 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12771244/full.md

## References

37 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12771244/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12771244