Fishman Ezra, Fisch Michael J, Liu Ying, Barron John J, Nguyen Ann, Sylwestrzak Gosia
National Committee for Quality Assurance, Washington, DC.
AIM Specialty Health, Chicago, IL.
JCO Oncol Pract. 2020 Aug;16(8):e797-e806. doi: 10.1200/JOP.19.00525. Epub 2020 Mar 10.
Cancer care has increasingly shifted from physician offices (MDOs) to hospital-based outpatient departments (HOPDs). This study compared the proportion of patients receiving optimal, evidence-based anticancer drug regimens and the cost of care when administered in these sites.
Patients with breast, lung, or colorectal cancer were identified from a large health insurance database. Anticancer drug regimens were considered on pathway when they were on the payer's program list of optimal regimens when administered. Anticancer drug-related costs included all patient- and plan-paid costs on claims for anticancer drugs over the 6-month postindex period; total per-patient costs were summed over all claims in that period.
A total of 38,140 patients (MDO, n = 18,998; HOPD, n = 19,142) were included. On-pathway status was similar in HOPDs (59.5%; 95% CI, 58.6% to 60.4%) versus MDOs (60.8%; 95% CI, 59.8% to 61.8%; = .069). HOPDs had substantially higher costs. Adjusted cancer drug-related costs were $63,763 (95% CI, $62,301 to $65,224) for HOPDs versus $36,500 (95% CI, $35,729 to $37,271) for MDOs ( < .001); adjusted total costs were $115,843 (95% CI, $113,642 to $118,044) for HOPDs versus $77,346 (95% CI, $76,072 to $78,620) for MDOs ( < .001). For Medicare Advantage, adjusted total costs were $61,812 for HOPDs compared with $62,769 for MDOs; adjusted drug-related costs were $31,610 for HOPDs compared with $33,168 for MDOs. For commercial insurance, total costs were $119,288 for HOPDs compared with $77,613 for MDOs; drug-related costs were $65,930 for HOPDs compared with $36,366 for MDOs.
Total and cancer drug-related per-patient costs were higher in HOPDs versus MDOs, but on-pathway status was similar. The cost differential between HOPDs and MDOs was driven by commercially insured members rather than Medicare Advantage members.
癌症护理越来越多地从医生办公室(MDO)转移到医院门诊部门(HOPD)。本研究比较了在这些场所接受最佳循证抗癌药物治疗方案的患者比例以及护理成本。
从一个大型健康保险数据库中识别出乳腺癌、肺癌或结直肠癌患者。当抗癌药物治疗方案在给药时列在支付方的最佳方案列表中时,被视为符合治疗路径。抗癌药物相关成本包括索引后6个月内抗癌药物索赔中所有患者和计划支付的成本;每位患者的总成本是该期间所有索赔的总和。
共纳入38140例患者(MDO组,n = 18998;HOPD组,n = 19142)。HOPD组的符合治疗路径状态为59.5%(95%CI,58.6%至60.4%),MDO组为60.8%(95%CI,59.8%至61.8%;P = 0.069)。HOPD组的成本显著更高。调整后的抗癌药物相关成本,HOPD组为63763美元(95%CI,62301美元至65224美元),MDO组为36500美元(95%CI,35729美元至37271美元)(P < 0.001);调整后的总成本,HOPD组为115843美元(95%CI,113642美元至118044美元),MDO组为77346美元(95%CI,76072美元至78620美元)(P < 0.001)。对于医疗保险优势计划,HOPD组的调整后总成本为61812美元,MDO组为62769美元;调整后的药物相关成本,HOPD组为31610美元,MDO组为33168美元。对于商业保险,HOPD组的总成本为119288美元,MDO组为77613美元;药物相关成本,HOPD组为65930美元,MDO组为36366美元。
HOPD组每位患者的总成本和抗癌药物相关成本高于MDO组,但符合治疗路径状态相似。HOPD组和MDO组之间的成本差异是由商业保险参保成员而非医疗保险优势计划参保成员驱动的。