Division of Population Sciences, Dana-Farber Cancer Institute, Boston, Massachusetts.
Division of Inpatient Oncology, Dana-Farber Cancer Institute, Boston, Massachusetts.
JAMA Oncol. 2021 Feb 1;7(2):199-205. doi: 10.1001/jamaoncol.2020.6159.
State crisis standards of care (CSC) guidelines in the US allocate scarce health care resources among patients. Anecdotal reports suggest that guidelines may disproportionately allocate resources away from patients with cancer, but no comprehensive evaluation has been performed.
To examine the implications of US state CSC guidelines for patients with cancer, including allocation methods, cancer-related categorical exclusions and deprioritizations, and provisions for blood products and palliative care.
DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS: This cross-sectional population-based analysis examined state-endorsed CSC guidelines published before May 20, 2020, that included health care resource allocation recommendations.
Guideline publication before or within 120 days after the first documented US case of coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19), inclusion of cancer-related categorical exclusions and/or deprioritizations, provisions for blood products and/or palliative care, and associations between these outcomes and state-based cancer demographics.
Thirty-one states had health care resource allocation guidelines that met inclusion criteria, of which 17 had been published or updated since the first US case of COVID-19. States whose available hospital bed capacity was predicted to exceed 100% at 6 months (χ2 = 3.82; P = .05) or that had a National Cancer Institute-designated Comprehensive Cancer Center (CCC; χ2 = 6.21; P = .01) were more likely to have publicly available guidelines. The most frequent primary methods of prioritization were the Sequential Organ Failure Assessment score (27 states [87%]) and deprioritizing persons with worse long-term prognoses (22 states [71%]). Seventeen states' (55%) allocation methods included cancer-related deprioritizations, and 8 states (26%) included cancer-related categorical exclusions. The presence of an in-state CCC was associated with lower likelihood of cancer-related categorical exclusions (multivariable odds ratio, 0.06 [95% CI, 0.004-0.87]). Guidelines with disability rights statements were associated with specific provisions to allocate blood products (multivariable odds ratio, 7.44 [95% CI, 1.28-43.24). Both the presence of an in-state CCC and having an oncologist and/or palliative care specialist on the state CSC task force were associated with the inclusion of palliative care provisions.
Among states with CSC guidelines, most deprioritized some patients with cancer during resource allocation, and one-fourth categorically excluded them. The presence of an in-state CCC was associated with guideline availability, palliative care provisions, and lower odds of cancer-related exclusions. These data suggest that equitable state-level CSC considerations for patients with cancer benefit from the input of oncology stakeholders.
美国的州危机标准护理 (CSC) 指南在患者之间分配稀缺的医疗资源。有传闻称,这些指南可能不成比例地将资源从癌症患者身上转移走,但尚未进行全面评估。
检查美国州 CSC 指南对癌症患者的影响,包括分配方法、与癌症相关的分类排除和优先级降低,以及血液制品和姑息治疗的规定。
设计、地点和参与者:本横断面基于人群的分析检查了在 2020 年 5 月 20 日之前发布的、包括医疗资源分配建议的州认可的 CSC 指南。
指南发布时间早于或在首例美国 2019 年冠状病毒病 (COVID-19) 病例出现后 120 天内,与癌症相关的分类排除和/或优先级降低,血液制品和/或姑息治疗的规定,以及这些结果与州癌症人口统计学之间的关系。
有 31 个州有符合纳入标准的医疗资源分配指南,其中 17 个州自美国首例 COVID-19 病例以来已发布或更新。预计在 6 个月内可用医院床位容量超过 100%的州(χ2=3.82;P=.05)或有国立癌症研究所指定的综合癌症中心(CCC;χ2=6.21;P=.01)的州更有可能发布公共指南。最常用的主要优先级方法是序贯器官衰竭评估评分(27 个州[87%])和优先考虑预后较差的患者(22 个州[71%])。17 个州(55%)的分配方法包括与癌症相关的优先级降低,8 个州(26%)包括与癌症相关的分类排除。州内 CCC 的存在与癌症相关的分类排除的可能性降低相关(多变量优势比,0.06 [95%CI,0.004-0.87])。有残疾权利声明的指南与特定的血液制品分配规定相关(多变量优势比,7.44 [95%CI,1.28-43.24])。州 CSC 工作组中有肿瘤学家和/或姑息治疗专家的存在与姑息治疗规定的纳入相关。
在有 CSC 指南的州中,大多数情况下在资源分配过程中优先考虑了某些癌症患者,而四分之一的州则对他们进行了分类排除。州内 CCC 的存在与指南的可用性、姑息治疗规定以及癌症相关排除的可能性降低相关。这些数据表明,患者的癌症需要在州一级的 CSC 中得到公平考虑,这需要肿瘤学利益相关者的投入。