| Literature DB >> 32266801 |
Xiaomeng Yue1, Jane M Pruemer2, Ana L Hincapie2, Ziyad S Almalki3, Jeff J Guo2.
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: This study estimated nationally representative medical expenditures of gynecologic cancers, described treatment patterns and assessed key risk factors associated with the economic burden in the United States.Entities:
Keywords: Cost of Illness; Drug Utilization; Health Expenditures; Ovarian Neoplasms; Uterine Cervical Neoplasms
Year: 2020 PMID: 32266801 PMCID: PMC7286759 DOI: 10.3802/jgo.2020.31.e52
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Gynecol Oncol ISSN: 2005-0380 Impact factor: 4.401
Fig. 1Andersen behavior model of treatment cost among gynecologic cancer patients.
CAT, computerized axial tomography; MRI, magnetic resonance imaging.
Sample demographics among adults with gynecologic cancers, 2007–2014
| Patient-level characteristics | Overall (n=609,787) | Uterine cancer (n=221,848) | Cervical cancer (n=212,101) | Ovarian cancer (n=65,937) | p-value† | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Age | ||||||
| 18–34 | 94,314 (16.1) | 10,122 (4.7) | 70,466 (33.3) | 2,149 (3.8) | ||
| 35–49 | 153,010 (26.2) | 26,744 (12.5) | 94,714 (44.8) | 13,118 (23.1) | ||
| 50–64 | 188,647 (32.3) | 85,425 (40.1) | 29,301 (13.9) | 28,649 (50.6) | ||
| 65–79 | 111,490 (19.1) | 73,862 (34.7) | 14,649 (6.9) | 10,599 (18.7) | ||
| ≥80 | 36,750 (6.3) | 16,968 (8) | 2,338 (1.1) | 2,157 (3.8) | ||
| Race | 0.982 | |||||
| White | 534,332 (87.6) | 193,648 (87.3) | 186,757 (88.1) | 56,624 (85.9) | ||
| Non-white | 75,455 (12.4) | 28,200 (12.7) | 25,345 (11.9) | 9,313 (14.1) | ||
| Marital status | 0.065 | |||||
| Married | 306,318 (50.2) | 128,581 (58) | 84,846 (40) | 34,382 (52.1) | ||
| Not married* | 303,469 (49.8) | 93,267 (42) | 127,256 (60) | 31,555 (47.9) | ||
| Educational attainment | ||||||
| ≤High school | 329,884 (63.2) | 134,921 (68.3) | 126,905 (70.1) | 38,632 (63.8) | ||
| ≥Some college | 192,383 (36.8) | 62,604 (31.7) | 54,220 (29.9) | 21,965 (36.2) | ||
| Family income Poverty level | ||||||
| Poor & near poor | 151,346 (24.8) | 39,846 (18) | 68,621 (32.4) | 13,766 (20.9) | ||
| Low & middle income | 253,701 (41.6) | 93,801 (42.3) | 93,772 (44.2) | 32,514 (49.3) | ||
| High income | 204,741 (33.6) | 88,200 (39.8) | 49,708 (23.4) | 19,657 (29.8) | ||
| Health insurance Coverage | 0.306 | |||||
| Private | 371,689 (61) | 144,528 (65.1) | 115,822 (54.6) | 42,912 (65.1) | ||
| Non-private | 238,098 (39) | 77,320 (34.9) | 96,279 (45.4) | 23,025 (34.9) | ||
| Census region | 0.396 | |||||
| Northeast | 143,976 (24.6) | 62,364 (29.3) | 39,262 (18.6) | 9,947 (17.6) | ||
| Midwest | 124,520 (21.3) | 43,300 (20.3) | 44,412 (21) | 13,196 (23.3) | ||
| South | 171,861 (29.4) | 65,736 (30.8) | 66,491 (31.4) | 15,305 (27) | ||
| West | 143,854 (24.6) | 41,722 (19.6) | 61,302 (29) | 18,223 (32.2) | ||
| Comorbidities | ||||||
| Hypertension | 284,807 (47) | 134,501 (61) | 66,310 (31.3) | 32,838 (49.8) | ||
| Stroke | 55,937 (9.2) | 29,743 (13.5) | 8,033 (3.8) | 5,171 (7.8) | ||
| Emphysema | 24,334 (4) | 8,674 (3.9) | 8,210 (3.9) | 809 (1.2) | 0.384 | |
| High cholesterol | 232,911 (38.4) | 102,140 (46.4) | 64,765 (30.5) | 28,380 (43) | 0.056 | |
| Diabetes | 121,979 (20.1) | 61,561 (27.9) | 21,704 (10.2) | 20,855 (31.6) | ||
| Arthritis | 261,621 (43.2) | 115,386 (52.4) | 67,779 (32) | 31,786 (48.2) | ||
| Asthma | 79,678 (13.1) | 32,397 (14.7) | 26,874 (12.7) | 6,044 (9.2) | 0.770 | |
| Currently smoke | ||||||
| Yes | 99,027 (18.4) | 24,489 (12.8) | 61,072 (30.5) | 3,596 (7.3) | ||
| No | 439,144 (81.6) | 166,955 (87.2) | 138,913 (69.5) | 45,989 (92.7) | ||
| Perceived health status | 0.210 | |||||
| Excellent/good | 390,206 (65.7) | 150,663 (68.7) | 144,099 (68.1) | 31,770 (52.5) | ||
| Fair/poor | 203,942 (34.3) | 68,610 (31.3) | 67,368 (31.9) | 28,687 (47.5) | ||
Values are presented as number (%). Number is indicated total number of patients in the US population (calculated by using Medical Expenditure Panel Survey weights) and % is indicated weighted percentage. Bold text indicates a statistically significant difference with a p-value less than 0.05.
*All respondents reported “widowed,” “divorced,” “separated,” or “never married” were grouped in the “not married” category; †All statistical tests were 2-sided, and all p-values were calculated using Pearson's χ2 test. Statistically significant (p<0.05).
Fig. 2Sum of medical expenditures of gynecologic cancer patients by type of service and cancer type*, 2007–2014
*All monetary values were converted to 2014 dollars using the price indices recommended by Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality; †Others medical expenditures include visual aids, medical equipment, supplies, and other medical items.
Sum of medical expenditures of gynecologic cancer patients by type of service and cancer type, 2007–2014*
| Costs by type of service | Overall (n=609,787) | Uterine cancer (n=221,848) | Cervical cancer (n=212,101) | Ovarian cancer (n=65,937) | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Hospital inpatient stay | $2,028,247,359 | 53% | $959,270,979 | 63% | $235,549,768 | 48% | $454,728,050 | 51% |
| Office-based medical provider | $559,358,549 | 15% | $183,164,214 | 12% | $98,811,698 | 20% | $100,637,439 | 11% |
| Outpatient department | $487,649,416 | 13% | $201,434,489 | 13% | $88,188,227 | 18% | $98,832,487 | 11% |
| Home health care | $302,984,914 | 8% | $144,385,891 | 9% | $9,132,439 | 2% | $56,619,941 | 6% |
| Emergency room | $36,702,336 | 1% | $5,340,525 | 0% | $612,547 | 0% | $1,907,735 | 0% |
| Prescription medication | $2,107,417 | 0% | $589,257 | 0% | $133,866 | 0% | $1,206,905 | 0% |
| Others† | $420,361,715 | 11% | $25,885,286 | 2% | $57,928,166 | 12% | $180,596,142 | 20% |
| Total | $3,837,411,706 | $1,520,070,641 | $490,356,711 | $894,528,699 | ||||
Number is indicated total number of patients in the US population (calculated by using Medical Expenditure Panel Survey weights) and % is indicated weighted percentage.
*All monetary values were converted to 2014 dollars using the price indices recommended by Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality; †Others medical expenditures include visual aids, medical equipment, supplies, and other medical items.
Top 5 prescription medications frequency and expenditure of gynecologic cancer patients by drug category, 2007–2014*
| Cancer type | Category | Rx No.† (%) | Mean (95% CI) | Sum |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Overall | Analgesics‡ | 3,772 (39) | 51.5 (15.1, 87.9) | $194,118 |
| Sex hormones§ | 1,649 (17.1) | 41.7 (31.4, 52.1) | $68,841 | |
| Antineoplastic hormones‖ | 958 (9.9) | 227.2 (148.9,305.5) | $217,591 | |
| Antiemetic/antivertigo agents¶ | 313 (3.2) | 135.8 (90.3, 181.4) | $42,488 | |
| Antidepressants** | 276 (2.9) | 64.7 (34.5, 94.8) | $17,832 | |
| Uterine cancer | Analgesics | 1,046 (25.8) | 29.6 (21.4, 37.9) | $31,011 |
| Sex hormones | 1,005 (24.8) | 38.7 (5.48, 82.9) | $38,923 | |
| Antineoplastic hormones | 484 (11.9) | 293.2 (68.8, 517.5) | $141,786 | |
| Antidepressants | 235 (5.8) | 57.6 (57.6, 57.6) | $13,516 | |
| Iron products | 231 (5.7) | 9.1 (9.1, 9.1) | $2,107 | |
| Cervical cancer | Analgesics | 960 (51.2) | 43.7 (41.4, 45.9) | $41,894 |
| Sex hormones | 479 (25.6) | 56.9 (21.4, 92.5) | $27,276 | |
| Penicillins | 78 (4.2) | 4.4 (4.4, 4.4) | $345 | |
| Laxatives | 68 (3.6) | 35.8 (35.8, 35.8) | $2,449 | |
| Antineoplastic hormones | 60 (3.2) | 749.2 (749.2, 749.2) | $45,056 | |
| Ovarian cancer | Sex hormones | 165 (17.8) | 16.0 (16.0, 16.0) | $2,642 |
| Antiemetic/antivertigo agents | 97 (10.4) | 91.8 (−125.42, 309.0) | $8,884 | |
| Analgesics | 95 (10.2) | 52.6 (43.3, 61.8) | $4,980 | |
| Miscellaneous antineoplastics | 74 (8) | 8,201.6 (8,201.6, 8,201.6) | $607,715 | |
| Colony stimulating factors | 74 (8) | 7,540.2 (7,540.2, 7,540.2) | $558,708 |
CI, confidence interval.
*All monetary values were converted to 2014 dollars using the price indices recommended by Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality; †Total number of prescriptions; ‡Analgesics include Codeine, Oxycodone, Diclofenac, Endocet, Fentanyl, Hydrocortisone, Hydromorphone, Ibuprofen, Lortab, Methadone, Morphine, Motrin, Oxycontin, Percocet, Tylenol, and Vicodin; §Sex hormones include Climara, Esterified Estrogens/Methyltestosterone, Estradiol, Necon, Premarin, and Ortho; ‖Antineoplastic hormones include Anastrozole, Arimidex, Femara, Letrozole, Lupron Depot, Medroxyprogesterone, Megestrol, and Tamoxifen; ¶Antiemetic or antivertigo agents include Emend, Reglan, Prochlorperazine, Ondansetron, and Metoclopramide; **Antidepressants include Citalopram Hydrobromide, Duloxetine, Effexor Xr, Fluoxetine, Trazodone, and Zoloft.
Survey summary of multiple log linear regression for medical expenditures for patients with gynecologic cancers (n=609,787)*
| Predictor variable | OR | 95% CI | p-value | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Age (yr) | |||||
| 18–49 | 0.85 | 0.76–0.95 | 0.006 | ||
| 50–64 | 1.27 | 1.09–1.49 | 0.003 | ||
| ≥65 | Reference | ||||
| Marital status | |||||
| Married | 1.63 | 1.44–1.86 | <0.001 | ||
| Not married | Reference | ||||
| Family income poverty level | |||||
| Poor & near poor | 0.81 | 0.70–0.93 | 0.003 | ||
| Low & middle income | 1.24 | 1.12–1.37 | <0.001 | ||
| High income | Reference | ||||
| Health insurance coverage | |||||
| Private | 1.98 | 1.68–2.33 | <0.001 | ||
| Non-private | Reference | ||||
| Census region | |||||
| Northeast | 1.27 | 1.05–1.54 | 0.015 | ||
| Midwest | 2.36 | 2.14–2.61 | <0.001 | ||
| South | 1.83 | 1.49–2.24 | <0.001 | ||
| West | Reference | ||||
| Perceived health status | |||||
| Excellent/good | 0.43 | 0.39–0.47 | <0.001 | ||
| Fair/poor | Reference | ||||
| Comorbidities | |||||
| High cholesterol | |||||
| Yes | 0.86 | 0.75–0.98 | 0.025 | ||
| No | Reference | ||||
| Diabetes | |||||
| Yes | 2.36 | 1.90–2.94 | <0.001 | ||
| No | Reference | ||||
CI, confidence interval; OR, odds ratio.
*All statistical tests were 2-sided, and all p-values were derived from regressions. A p-value of less than 0.05 means that cancer patients bear statistically significant higher economic burden. Statistically significant (p<0.05).