Quality of Treatment Selection for Medicare Beneficiaries With Cancer.

IF 42.1 1区 医学 Q1 ONCOLOGY
Journal of Clinical Oncology Pub Date : 2025-02-10 Epub Date: 2024-10-11 DOI:10.1200/JCO.24.00459
Aaron P Mitchell, Sonia Persaud, Akriti Mishra Meza, Hannah E Fuchs, Prabal De, Sara Tabatabai, Nirjhar Chakraborty, Pranam Dey, Niti U Trivedi, Sham Mailankody, Victoria Blinder, Angela Green, Andrew S Epstein, Bobby Daly, Lindsey Roeker, Peter B Bach, Mithat Gönen
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Purpose: The Medicare part D Low-Income Subsidy (LIS) improves access to oral cancer drugs, but provides no assistance for clinician-administered/part B drugs. This analysis assessed the association between LIS participation and receipt of optimal cancer treatment.

Methods: We investigated initial systemic therapy using SEER-Medicare data (2015-2017) and National Comprehensive Cancer Network (NCCN) Evidence Blocks (EB) as the standard for treatment recommendations. We included cancer clinical scenarios wherein (1) ≥one treatment was optimal (higher efficacy and safety scores) versus other treatments; (2) identifiable in SEER-Medicare (eg, not defined by clinical data unavailable in registry data or claims); and (3) both EB and ASCO Value Framework agreed regarding optimal treatment. We fit logistic regression models to assess the association between receipt of systemic therapy (v no therapy) and patient and provider characteristics. Contingent on receipt of treatment, we modeled the likelihood of receiving a treatment ranked (by EB scores) within the highest or lowest quartile for that cancer type.

Results: Nine thousand two hundred and ninety patients were included across 11 clinical scenarios. Fifty-seven percent (5,336) of patients received any systemic therapy and 43% (3,954) received no systemic therapy. Compared with non-LIS participants, LIS participants were less likely to receive any systemic therapy versus no systemic therapy (odds ratio, 0.64 [95% CI, 0.57 to 0.72]). Contingent on receiving systemic therapy, LIS participants received treatment ranked within the worst quartile 24.8% of the time, compared with 21.9% of non-LIS patients (adjusted prevalence difference, 4.3% [95% CI, 0.5 to 8.2]).

Conclusion: LIS participants were less likely to receive systemic therapy at all and were more likely to receive treatments that receive low NCCN EB scores.

癌症医疗保险受益人选择治疗的质量。
目的:医疗保险 D 部分低收入补贴(LIS)提高了口服抗癌药物的可及性,但对临床医生管理/B 部分药物不提供补助。本分析评估了参与 LIS 与接受最佳癌症治疗之间的关联:我们使用 SEER-Medicare 数据(2015-2017 年)和美国国家综合癌症网络(NCCN)证据模块(EB)作为治疗建议的标准,对初始系统治疗进行了调查。我们纳入了以下癌症临床情景:(1) 相对于其他治疗方法,≥一种治疗方法为最佳治疗方法(疗效和安全性评分更高);(2) SEER-Medicare 中可识别(例如,注册数据或索赔中无法获得的临床数据未定义);(3) EB 和 ASCO 价值框架就最佳治疗方法达成一致。我们拟合了逻辑回归模型,以评估接受系统治疗(与不接受治疗)与患者和医疗服务提供者特征之间的关联。根据接受治疗的情况,我们模拟了接受该癌症类型最高或最低四分位数治疗的可能性(根据 EB 评分):九千二百九十名患者被纳入 11 种临床方案。57%的患者(5336 人)接受了任何系统治疗,43%的患者(3954 人)未接受任何系统治疗。与非 LIS 参与者相比,LIS 参与者接受任何系统治疗与不接受系统治疗的可能性较低(几率比为 0.64 [95% CI,0.57 至 0.72])。在接受系统治疗的情况下,LIS 参与者有 24.8% 的时间接受了最差四分位数的治疗,而非 LIS 患者的这一比例为 21.9%(调整后的患病率差异为 4.3% [95% CI,0.5 至 8.2]):结论:LIS 患者接受系统治疗的可能性较小,而接受 NCCN EB 评分较低的治疗的可能性较大。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Journal of Clinical Oncology
Journal of Clinical Oncology 医学-肿瘤学
CiteScore
41.20
自引率
2.20%
发文量
8215
审稿时长
2 months
期刊介绍: The Journal of Clinical Oncology serves its readers as the single most credible, authoritative resource for disseminating significant clinical oncology research. In print and in electronic format, JCO strives to publish the highest quality articles dedicated to clinical research. Original Reports remain the focus of JCO, but this scientific communication is enhanced by appropriately selected Editorials, Commentaries, Reviews, and other work that relate to the care of patients with cancer.
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