Warren Joan L, Mariotto Angela, Melbert Danielle, Schrag Deborah, Doria-Rose Paul, Penson David, Yabroff K Robin
*Division of Cancer Control and Population Sciences, National Cancer Institute, Bethesda †Information Management Services Inc., Beltsville, MD ‡Department of Medicine, Dana-Farber Cancer Institute, Boston, MA §Center for Surgical Quality and Outcomes Research, Vanderbilt-Ingram Cancer Center, Nashville, TN.
Med Care. 2016 Aug;54(8):e47-54. doi: 10.1097/MLR.0000000000000058.
Researchers are increasingly interested in using observational data to evaluate cancer outcomes following treatment, including cancer recurrence and disease-free survival. Because population-based cancer registries do not collect recurrence data, recurrence is often imputed from health claims, primarily by identifying later cancer treatments after initial treatment. The validity of this approach has not been established.
We used the linked Surveillance, Epidemiology, and End Results-Medicare data to assess the sensitivity of Medicare claims for cancer recurrence in patients very likely to have had a recurrence. We selected newly diagnosed stage II/III colorectal (n=6910) and female breast cancer (n=3826) patients during 1994-2003 who received initial cancer surgery, had a treatment break, and then died from cancer in 1994-2008. We reviewed all claims from the treatment break until death for indicators of recurrence. We focused on additional cancer treatment (surgery, chemotherapy, radiation therapy) as the primary indicator, and used multivariate logistic regression analysis to evaluate patient factors associated with additional treatment. We also assessed metastasis diagnoses and end-of-life care as recurrence indicators.
Additional treatment was the first indicator of recurrence for 38.8% of colorectal patients and 35.2% of breast cancer patients. Patients aged 70 and older were less likely to have additional treatment (P < 0.05), in adjusted analyses. Over 20% of patients either had no recurrence indicator before death or had end-of-life care as their first indicator.
Identifying recurrence through additional cancer treatment in Medicare claims will miss a large percentage of patients with recurrences; particularly those who are older.
研究人员越来越有兴趣利用观察性数据来评估治疗后的癌症结局,包括癌症复发和无病生存期。由于基于人群的癌症登记处不收集复发数据,复发情况通常从健康保险理赔记录中估算,主要是通过识别初次治疗后的后续癌症治疗来确定。这种方法的有效性尚未得到证实。
我们使用了关联的监测、流行病学和最终结果 - 医疗保险数据,以评估医疗保险理赔记录对于极有可能复发的患者癌症复发情况的敏感性。我们选取了1994 - 2003年期间新诊断为II/III期结直肠癌(n = 6910)和女性乳腺癌(n = 3826)的患者,这些患者接受了初次癌症手术,有一段治疗间隔期,然后在1994 - 2008年期间死于癌症。我们审查了从治疗间隔期到死亡的所有理赔记录以寻找复发指标。我们将额外的癌症治疗(手术、化疗、放疗)作为主要指标,并使用多变量逻辑回归分析来评估与额外治疗相关的患者因素。我们还评估了转移诊断和临终关怀作为复发指标。
对于38.8%的结直肠癌患者和35.2%的乳腺癌患者,额外治疗是复发的首个指标。在调整分析中,70岁及以上的患者接受额外治疗的可能性较小(P < 0.05)。超过20%的患者在死亡前要么没有复发指标,要么以临终关怀作为他们的首个指标。
通过医疗保险理赔记录中的额外癌症治疗来识别复发会遗漏很大比例的复发患者;尤其是那些年龄较大的患者。