| Literature DB >> 30815763 |
Jerry Polesel1, Valentina Lupato2, Paolo Collarile3,4, Emanuela Vaccher5, Giuseppe Fanetti6, Vittorio Giacomarra2, Elisa Palazzari6, Carlo Furlan7, Fabio Matrone6, Federico Navarria6, Carlo Gobitti6, Emilio Minatel6, Diego Serraino8, Silvia Birri9, Giovanni Franchin6.
Abstract
Improvements in prognosis of head-and-neck squamous cell carcinoma (HNSCC) have paralleled with an increase in health-care costs, so that an economic evaluation is of growing importance. Presently, most of the evidence is from insurance-based studies in the USA. Between 2007 and 2010, 879 HNSCC patients were identified through the population-based cancer registry of the Friuli Venezia Giulia region, including 266 oral, 187 oropharyngeal, 136 hypopharyngeal, and 290 laryngeal cancers. Health-care costs from diagnosis to treatment initiation and in the following 2 years were retrieved through a record linkage with the regional health data warehouse. This database collected comprehensive health information on all resident citizens. Generalized linear models with a gamma distribution and log-link function were applied to model costs. The average health-care cost from diagnosis up to 2 years after treatment initiation was €20,184 (95% confidence interval: €19,634 - 20,733). Heterogeneity emerged according to cancer site, elective treatment, and retreatment for cancer persistence/recurrence (no: €13,896; yes: €24,599; p < 0.001). An advanced stage was associated with increased costs stage (I: €12,969; II: €18,276; III: €26,229; IV: €25,574; p < 0.001) as the result of treatment complexity and elevated frequency of patients retreatment due to recurrence. These findings further support strategies to diagnose patients at an earlier cancer stage and the accurate definition of diagnostic and treatment pathways, to start treating patients when radical unimodal approach is still feasible. Besides the advantage in prognosis due to timely curative treatments, this would reduce the economic burden of cancer treatment.Entities:
Keywords: Diagnostic cost; Economic burden; Head and neck cancer; Population-based study; Treatment cost
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 30815763 DOI: 10.1007/s12032-019-1256-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Med Oncol ISSN: 1357-0560 Impact factor: 3.064