Department of Radiation Oncology.
Department of Health Services Research, and.
J Natl Compr Canc Netw. 2019 Oct 1;17(10):1184-1192. doi: 10.6004/jnccn.2019.7305.
Patients with cancer experience financial toxicity from the costs of treatment, as well as material and psychologic stress related to this burden. A synthesized understanding of predictors and outcomes of the financial burdens associated with cancer care is needed to underpin strategic responses in oncology care. This study systematically reviewed risk factors and outcomes associated with financial burdens related to cancer treatment.
MEDLINE, Embase, PubMed, PsychINFO, and the Cochrane Library were searched from study inception through June 2018, and reference lists were scanned from studies of patient-level predictors and outcomes of financial burdens in US patients with cancer (aged ≥18 years). Two reviewers conducted screening, abstraction, and quality assessment. Variables associated with financial burdens were synthesized. When possible, pooled estimates of associations were calculated using random-effects models.
A total of 74 observational studies of financial burdens in 598,751 patients with cancer were identified, among which 49% of patients reported material or psychologic financial burdens (95% CI, 41%-56%). Socioeconomic predictors of worse financial burdens with treatment were lack of health insurance, lower income, unemployment, and younger age at cancer diagnosis. Compared with patients with health insurance, those who were uninsured demonstrated twice the odds of financial burdens (pooled odds ratio [OR], 2.09; 95% CI, 1.33-3.30). Financial burdens were most severe early in cancer treatment, did not differ by disease site, and were associated with worse health-related quality of life (HRQoL) and nearly twice the odds of cancer medication nonadherence (pooled OR, 1.70; 95% CI, 1.13-2.56). Only a single study demonstrated an association with increased mortality. Studies assessing the comparative effectiveness of interventions to mitigate financial burdens in patients with cancer were lacking.
Evidence showed that financial burdens are common, disproportionately impacting younger and socioeconomically disadvantaged patients with cancer, across disease sites, and are associated with worse treatment adherence and HRQoL. Available evidence helped identify vulnerable patients needing oncology provider engagement and response, but evidence is critically needed on the effectiveness of interventions designed to mitigate financial burden and impact.
癌症患者不仅要承受治疗费用带来的经济毒性,还要承受与这些负担相关的物质和心理压力。为了支持肿瘤学护理的战略应对,需要综合了解与癌症护理相关的经济负担的预测因素和结果。本研究系统地回顾了与癌症治疗相关的经济负担的风险因素和结果。
从研究开始到 2018 年 6 月,我们在 MEDLINE、Embase、PubMed、PsychINFO 和 Cochrane 图书馆中进行了搜索,并从美国癌症患者(年龄≥18 岁)的患者水平预测因素和经济负担结果的研究中扫描了参考文献列表。两位审查员进行了筛选、摘要和质量评估。综合了与经济负担相关的变量。当可能时,使用随机效应模型计算了关联的汇总估计值。
共确定了 74 项关于 598751 例癌症患者经济负担的观察性研究,其中 49%的患者报告存在物质或心理经济负担(95%CI,41%-56%)。治疗中经济负担更差的社会经济预测因素包括缺乏健康保险、收入较低、失业和癌症诊断时年龄较小。与有健康保险的患者相比,没有保险的患者经济负担的几率增加了一倍(汇总优势比[OR],2.09;95%CI,1.33-3.30)。经济负担在癌症治疗早期最为严重,与疾病部位无关,与较差的健康相关生活质量(HRQoL)相关,癌症药物不依从的几率增加近两倍(汇总 OR,1.70;95%CI,1.13-2.56)。仅有一项研究表明与死亡率增加有关。缺乏评估减轻癌症患者经济负担的干预措施比较效果的研究。
证据表明,经济负担很常见,不成比例地影响着各个疾病部位的年轻和社会经济弱势群体的癌症患者,并且与较差的治疗依从性和 HRQoL 相关。现有证据有助于确定需要肿瘤学提供者参与和回应的脆弱患者,但迫切需要关于旨在减轻经济负担和影响的干预措施的有效性的证据。