Department of Surveillance & Health Policy Research, American Cancer Society, Atlanta, GA 30303-1002, USA.
Cancer J. 2010 Nov-Dec;16(6):614-21. doi: 10.1097/PPO.0b013e3181ff2aec.
Prior studies have demonstrated that individuals without health insurance are less likely to have a usual source of health care and receive preventive services including cancer screening and are more likely to be diagnosed at late stages of cancer. To examine the potential impact of health care reform on stage at diagnosis, we analyzed the relationship between stage at diagnosis and insurance status for patients who were nearly elderly (55-64 years old) and younger elderly (65-74 years old). We examined patients diagnosed with 8 common cancers from January 1, 2005, to December 31, 2007, using data from the National Cancer Database, a hospital-based cancer registry jointly sponsored by the American Cancer Society and the American College of Surgeons, which includes approximately 70% of all malignant cancers in the United States treated at 1400 facilities throughout the United States. Cancer site-specific multivariable log binomial models were used to generate risk ratio (RR) and 95% confidence interval (CI) estimates for advanced stage of disease at diagnosis (stage III or IV vs stage I) by insurance category, controlling for age, race/ethnicity, and area level education. The final analytic cohort contained 843,177 patients. For each cancer site, uninsured and Medicaid-insured patients had the highest proportion of American Joint Committee on Cancer stages III and IV cancers at diagnosis, and those with private insurance and Medicare plus supplemental insurance the lowest. Risk ratios (95% CI) for uninsured patients compared with privately insured patients were 1.75 (1.64-1.86) for prostate, 1.12 (1.11-1.14) for lung/bronchus, 2.08 (1.98-2.17) for breast, 1.25 (1.22-1.27) for colorectal, 1.51 (1.40-1.64) for uterine corpus, 1.91 (1.73-2.12) for urinary bladder, 1.80 (1.62-2.01) for melanoma, and 1.37 (1.24-1.51) for thyroid cancers. Lower RRs (95% CI) observed for patients with Medicare coverage alone were 1.23 (1.17-1.29) for prostate, 1.05 (1.03-1.06) for lung/bronchus, 1.41 (1.33-1.48) for breast, 1.08 (1.05-1.10) for colorectal, 1.20 (1.11-1.31) for uterine corpus, 1.54 (1.40-1.70) for urinary bladder, 1.13 (1.01-1.26) for melanoma, and 1.10 (1.01-1.21) for thyroid. In contrast, there was no significant difference between RRs of late-stage diagnosis for any cancer site for patients insured by Medicare Advantage programs. If health care reform extends coverage to a large proportion of adults who are currently uninsured and provides benefits equal to or better than Medicare coverage, the proportion of patients diagnosed with late-stage cancer is likely to decrease, particularly in subpopulations with low rates of coverage.
先前的研究表明,没有医疗保险的人不太可能有常规的医疗服务来源,也不太可能接受包括癌症筛查在内的预防服务,而且更有可能被诊断为癌症晚期。为了研究医疗改革对诊断时分期的潜在影响,我们分析了接近老年(55-64 岁)和老年(65-74 岁)患者的诊断分期与保险状况之间的关系。我们使用美国癌症协会和美国外科医生学院联合赞助的基于医院的癌症登记处——国家癌症数据库的数据,分析了 2005 年 1 月 1 日至 2007 年 12 月 31 日期间诊断的 8 种常见癌症患者的情况,该数据库包括了美国大约 70%的在全美 1400 家医疗机构治疗的恶性癌症。采用癌症部位特异性多变量对数二项式模型,根据保险类别,生成疾病诊断时晚期(III 期或 IV 期与 I 期)的风险比(RR)和 95%置信区间(CI)估计值,控制年龄、种族/民族和地区教育水平。最终分析队列包含 843177 名患者。对于每个癌症部位,无保险和医疗补助保险患者的癌症分期为美国癌症联合委员会 III 和 IV 期的比例最高,而有私人保险和补充医疗保险的患者比例最低。与私人保险患者相比,无保险患者的风险比(95%CI)为:前列腺癌 1.75(1.64-1.86)、肺癌/支气管癌 1.12(1.11-1.14)、乳腺癌 2.08(1.98-2.17)、结直肠癌 1.25(1.22-1.27)、子宫体癌 1.51(1.40-1.64)、膀胱癌 1.91(1.73-2.12)、黑素瘤 1.80(1.62-2.01)、甲状腺癌 1.37(1.24-1.51)。仅接受医疗保险覆盖的患者的 RR(95%CI)较低,为前列腺癌 1.23(1.17-1.29)、肺癌/支气管癌 1.05(1.03-1.06)、乳腺癌 1.41(1.33-1.48)、结直肠癌 1.08(1.05-1.10)、子宫体癌 1.20(1.11-1.31)、膀胱癌 1.54(1.40-1.70)、黑素瘤 1.13(1.01-1.26)、甲状腺癌 1.10(1.01-1.21)。相比之下,对于参加医疗保险优势计划的患者,任何癌症部位晚期诊断的 RR 没有显著差异。如果医疗改革将覆盖范围扩大到目前没有保险的大部分成年人,并提供与医疗保险覆盖范围相等或更好的福利,那么被诊断为晚期癌症的患者比例可能会下降,特别是在保险率较低的亚人群中。