金融毒性与乳腺癌:为什么重要,谁有风险,我们如何干预?

Q1 Medicine
Kamaria L Lee, Alexandru Eniu, Christopher M Booth, Molly MacDonald, Fumiko Chino
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引用次数: 0

摘要

财务毒性,或患者因医疗费用而承受的经济负担,可能导致患者的负面影响,包括生活质量下降、临床护理受损和健康结果恶化。与没有癌症的人相比,癌症患者和幸存者更有可能出现经济毒性,而乳腺癌患者的风险更大。乳腺癌患者通常需要多模式治疗(手术、放疗和/或全身治疗),辅助激素治疗可在初次治疗后持续数年。随着疾病预后的改善,乳腺癌患者的生存期延长,通常持续数十年,但治疗可能带来慢性毒性;转移性疾病的持续治疗和长期监测都包括持续的检查、成像和医疗访问,这增加了患者及其家属的累积负担。此外,乳腺癌主要影响妇女,她们更有可能承担双重照顾责任,并且越来越多的年轻患者被诊断出来,这些患者可能需要维持生育能力,更有可能经历教育和/或就业中断。当面对高昂的费用时,患者可能会面临艰难的决定,即他们愿意忍受什么样的牺牲来接受治疗。旨在减少金融毒性的干预措施正在走出试点阶段,正在进行的随机试验有望为金融导航计划的有效性提供证据。需要在患者-提供者、机构和政府层面进一步解决乳腺癌的财务毒性问题,以全面改善财务结果和生活质量。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Financial Toxicity and Breast Cancer: Why Does It Matter, Who Is at Risk, and How Do We Intervene?

Financial toxicity, or the financial burden patients experience because of medical costs, can lead to negative patient effects including lower quality of life, compromised clinical care, and worse health outcomes. People with cancer and survivors are more likely to have financial toxicity than those without cancer, and patients with breast cancer are uniquely at risk. Patients with breast cancer often require multimodal treatment (surgery, radiation, and/or systemic therapy) and adjuvant hormonal therapy can continue for years after primary treatment. With improved disease outcomes, patients with breast cancer have prolonged survivorship often lasting decades but may carry chronic toxicities from treatment; both ongoing treatment of metastatic disease and long-term surveillance include continued tests, imaging, and medical visits that add to the cumulative burden on patients and their families. Additionally, breast cancer predominately affects women, who are more likely to have dual caregiver responsibilities, and increasingly is diagnosed in younger patients, who may have fertility preservation expenses and are more likely to experience education and/or employment disruption. When faced with high costs, patients may face difficult decisions regarding what sacrifices they are willing to endure to receive care. Interventions designed to reduce financial toxicity are moving out of the pilot phase, and ongoing randomized trials are expected to provide evidence into the effectiveness of financial navigation programs. Further work to address financial toxicity in breast cancer at the patient-provider, institutional, and governmental levels is needed for comprehensively better financial outcomes and quality of life.

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期刊介绍: The Ed Book is a National Library of Medicine–indexed collection of articles written by ASCO Annual Meeting faculty and invited leaders in oncology. Ed Book was launched in 1985 to highlight standards of care and inspire future therapeutic possibilities in oncology. Published annually, each volume highlights the most compelling research and developments across the multidisciplinary fields of oncology and serves as an enduring scholarly resource for all members of the cancer care team long after the Meeting concludes. These articles address issues in the following areas, among others: Immuno-oncology, Surgical, radiation, and medical oncology, Clinical informatics and quality of care, Global health, Survivorship.
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