A. T. Malik, J. Alexander, S. N. Khan, T. J. Scharschmidt, The James Cancer Hospital and Solove Research Institute, the Ohio State University Wexner Medical Center, Columbus, OH, USA.
Clin Orthop Relat Res. 2021 Mar 1;479(3):493-502. doi: 10.1097/CORR.0000000000001438.
Treatment of bone and soft-tissue sarcomas can be costly, and therefore, it is not surprising that insurance status of patients is a prognostic factor in determining overall survival. Furthermore, uninsured individuals with suspected bone and/or soft-tissue masses routinely encounter difficulty in obtaining access to basic healthcare (such as office visits, radiology scans), and therefore are more likely to be diagnosed with later stages at presentation. The Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (ACA) mandate of 2010 aimed to increase access to care for uninsured individuals by launching initiatives, such as expanding Medicaid eligibility, subsidizing private insurance, and developing statewide mandates requiring individuals to have a prescribed minimum level of health insurance. Although prior reports have demonstrated that the ACA increased both coverage and the proportion of early-stage diagnoses among patients with common cancers (including breast, colon, prostate, and lung), it is unknown whether similar improvements have occurred for patients with bone and soft-tissue sarcomas. Understanding changes in insurance coverages and stage at diagnosis of patients with bone and soft-tissue sarcomas would be paramount in establishing policies that will ensure orthopaedic cancer care is made equitable and accessible to all.
QUESTIONS/PURPOSES: (1) Has the introduction of the ACA been associated with changes in insurance coverage for adult patients with newly diagnosed bone and soft-tissue sarcomas? (2) Did the introduction of health reforms under the ACA lead to an increased proportion of sarcoma diagnoses occurring at earlier disease stages?
The 2007 to 2015 Surveillance, Epidemiology and End Results database was queried using International Classification of Diseases for Oncology codes for primary malignant bone tumors of the upper and lower extremity (C40.0 to C40.3), unspecified or other overlapping bone, articular cartilage, and joint and/or ribs, sternum, or clavicle (C40.8 to C40.9, C41.3, and C41.8 to C41.9), vertebral column (C41.2), pelvis (C41.4, C41.8, and C41.9), and soft-tissue sarcomas of the upper or lower extremity and/or pelvis (C49.1, C49.2, and C49.5). A total of 15,287 patients with newly diagnosed cancers were included, of which 3647 (24%) were malignant bone tumors and 11,640 (76%) were soft-tissue sarcomas. The study sample was divided into three cohorts according to specified time periods: pre-ACA from 2007 to 2010 (6537 patients), pre-Medicaid expansion from 2011 to 2013 (5076 patients), and post-Medicaid expansion from 2014 to 2015 (3674 patients). The Pearson chi square tests were used to assess for changes in the proportion of Medicaid and uninsured patients across the specified time periods: pre-ACA, pre-expansion and post-expansion. A differences-in-differences analysis was also performed to assess changes in insurance coverage for Medicaid and uninsured patients among states that chose to expand Medicaid coverage in 2014 under the ACA's provision versus those who opted out of Medicaid expansion. Since the database switched to using the American Joint Commission on Cancer (AJCC) 7th edition staging system in 2010, linear regression using data only from 2010 to 2015 was performed that assessed changes in cancer stage at diagnosis from 2010 to 2015 alone. After stratifying by cancer type (bone or soft-tissue sarcoma), Pearson chi square tests were used to assess for changes in the proportion of patients who were diagnosed with early, late, and unknown stage at presentation before Medicaid expansion (2011-2013) and after Medicaid expansion (2014-2015) among states that chose to expand versus those who did not.
After stratifying by time cohorts: pre-ACA (2007 to 2010), pre-expansion (2011 to 2013) and post-expansion (2014 to 2015), we observed that the most dramatic changes occurred after Medicaid eligibility was expanded (2014 onwards), with Medicaid proportions increasing from 12% (pre-expansion, 2011 to 2013) to 14% (post-expansion, 2014 to 2015) (p < 0.001) and uninsured proportions decreasing from 5% (pre-expansion, 2011 to 2013) to 3% (post-expansion, 2014 to 2015) (p < 0.001). A differences-in-differences analysis that assessed the effect of Medicaid expansion showed that expanded states had an increase in the proportion of Medicaid patients compared with non-expanded states, (3.6% [95% confidence interval 0.4 to 6.8]; p = 0.03) from 2014 onwards. For the entire study sample, the proportion of early-stage diagnoses (I/II) increased from 56% (939 of 1667) in 2010 to 62% (1137 of 1840) in 2015 (p = 0.003). Similarly, the proportion of unknown stage diagnoses decreased from 11% (188 of 1667) in 2010 to 7% (128 of 1840) in 2015 (p = 0.002). There was no change in proportion of late-stage diagnoses (III/IV) from 32% (540 of 1667) in 2010 to 31% (575 of 1840) in 2015 (p = 0.13).
Access to cancer care for patients with primary bone or soft-tissue sarcomas improved after the ACA was introduced, as evidenced by a decrease in the proportion of uninsured patients and corresponding increase in Medicaid coverage. Improvements in coverage were most significant among states that adopted the Medicaid expansion of 2014. Furthermore, we observed an increasing proportion of early-stage diagnoses after the ACA was implemented. The findings support the preservation of the ACA to ensure cancer care is equitable and accessible to all vulnerable patient populations.
Level III, therapeutic study.
治疗骨和软组织肉瘤的费用可能很高,因此,患者的保险状况是影响总体生存率的预后因素之一,这并不奇怪。此外,疑似患有骨和/或软组织肿块的未参保患者在获得基本医疗保健(如就诊、放射学扫描)方面通常会遇到困难,因此更有可能在就诊时被诊断为晚期。2010 年通过的《患者保护与平价医疗法案》(ACA)旨在通过扩大医疗补助资格、补贴私人保险以及制定全州范围内的规定,要求个人拥有规定的最低健康保险水平,为未参保人员增加获得医疗服务的机会。尽管先前的报告表明,ACA 增加了常见癌症(包括乳腺癌、结肠癌、前列腺癌和肺癌)患者的覆盖率和早期诊断比例,但尚不清楚骨和软组织肉瘤患者是否也出现了类似的改善。了解骨和软组织肉瘤患者的保险覆盖范围和诊断时的分期变化,对于制定政策以确保所有弱势群体都能公平获得和获得矫形癌症护理至关重要。
问题/目的:(1)ACA 的引入是否与新诊断的骨和软组织肉瘤成年患者的保险覆盖范围的变化有关?(2)ACA 下的医疗改革是否导致更早阶段诊断出的肉瘤比例增加?
使用国际肿瘤学疾病分类(C40.0 至 C40.3)对 2007 年至 2015 年监测、流行病学和最终结果数据库进行了查询,用于上、下肢(C40.0 至 C40.3)、未指定或其他重叠的骨、关节软骨和关节/或肋骨、胸骨或锁骨(C40.8 至 C40.9、C41.3 和 C41.8 至 C41.9)、脊柱(C41.2)、骨盆(C41.4、C41.8 和 C41.9)和上、下肢和/或骨盆的软组织肉瘤(C49.1、C49.2 和 C49.5)的原发性恶性骨肿瘤的分类。共纳入 15287 名新诊断癌症患者,其中 3647 名(24%)为恶性骨肿瘤,11640 名(76%)为软组织肉瘤。根据指定的时间段,将研究样本分为三组:ACA 前(2007 年至 2010 年)6537 例,ACA 前扩展期(2011 年至 2013 年)5076 例,以及 ACA 后扩展期(2014 年至 2015 年)3674 例。采用 Pearson 卡方检验评估指定时间段内 Medicaid 和无保险患者比例的变化:ACA 前、扩展前和扩展后。还进行了差异差异分析,以评估在选择扩大 2014 年 ACA 下医疗补助覆盖范围的州与选择不扩大医疗补助覆盖范围的州之间, Medicaid 和无保险患者的保险覆盖范围变化。由于数据库在 2010 年开始使用美国癌症联合委员会(AJCC)第 7 版分期系统,因此仅使用 2010 年至 2015 年的数据进行线性回归,评估从 2010 年至 2015 年癌症分期的变化。在按癌症类型(骨或软组织肉瘤)分层后,采用 Pearson 卡方检验评估在选择扩大与不选择扩大的州中,在 Medicaid 扩大(2011 年至 2013 年)之前和之后(2014 年至 2015 年),在就诊时处于早期、晚期和未知阶段的患者比例的变化。
在按时间队列分层后:ACA 前(2007 年至 2010 年)、扩展前(2011 年至 2013 年)和扩展后(2014 年至 2015 年),我们观察到,在医疗补助资格扩大后(2014 年及以后)发生了最显著的变化,医疗补助比例从 12%(扩展前,2011 年至 2013 年)增加到 14%(扩展后,2014 年至 2015 年)(p < 0.001),而未参保比例从 5%(扩展前,2011 年至 2013 年)下降到 3%(扩展后,2014 年至 2015 年)(p < 0.001)。一项评估医疗补助扩大效果的差异差异分析显示,与非扩大州相比,扩大州的医疗补助患者比例有所增加,(3.6%[95%置信区间 0.4 至 6.8%];p = 0.03)从 2014 年开始。对于整个研究样本,早期诊断(I/II)的比例从 2010 年的 56%(939/1667)增加到 2015 年的 62%(1137/1840)(p = 0.003)。同样,未知阶段诊断的比例从 2010 年的 11%(188/1667)下降到 2015 年的 7%(128/1840)(p = 0.002)。2010 年的晚期诊断(III/IV)比例为 32%(540/1667),2015 年为 31%(575/1840),无变化(p = 0.13)。
ACA 引入后,原发性骨或软组织肉瘤患者获得癌症治疗的机会有所改善,这表现为未参保患者比例下降和医疗补助覆盖范围相应增加。在采用 2014 年医疗补助扩大的州中,覆盖范围的改善最为显著。此外,我们观察到 ACA 实施后早期诊断的比例增加。研究结果支持保留 ACA,以确保所有弱势群体都能公平获得和获得癌症护理。
III 级,治疗研究。