USC Norris Cancer Center, Keck Medical Center, University of Southern California, Los Angeles, CA, USA.
Department of Urology, University of Washington Seattle Cancer Care Alliance.
Eur Urol Oncol. 2021 Jun;4(3):396-404. doi: 10.1016/j.euo.2021.02.007. Epub 2021 Apr 2.
Financial toxicity (FT) refers to the detrimental effects of financial strain caused by a cancer diagnosis on the well-being of patients and their families. It is highly prevalent among cancer patients and has been associated with inferior clinical outcomes.
To summarize the literature regarding FT among patients with prostate, bladder, and kidney cancer, and to propose a framework for future FT investigations.
Primary manuscripts and abstracts reporting FT as a primary or secondary outcome or a covariate in patients with prostate, bladder, or kidney cancer, published before May 2020, were retrieved using the PubMed, Scopus, Embase, CINAHL, and Cochrane databases in accordance with the Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-analyses (PRISMA) statement. Of 629 titles identified, 19, ten, and two studies met the inclusion criteria for prostate, bladder, and kidney cancer, respectively, and were included (24 unique articles).
Significant heterogeneity was observed in covariates, methodology, and measure of FT. Factors commonly associated with FT included younger age at diagnosis, black race, low socioeconomic status, low education attainment, and rurality. FT was commonly associated with lower quality of life and nonadherence. FT was common among patients in countries with universal health coverage as well as those without, although the nature of these costs differed.
Despite paucity of literature, it is suggested that FT is common among patients with prostate and bladder cancer, and remains uncharacterized in kidney cancer patients. Future work will benefit from the incorporation of a formal FT framework, utilization of validated FT instruments to characterize FT consistently, and inclusion of FT measures in outcomes reported by patients with genitourinary cancers.
Financial toxicity affects many prostate, bladder, and kidney cancer patients; however, this toxicity is understudied. It is associated with decreased quality of life and lower medication and treatment adherence.
财务毒性(FT)是指癌症诊断导致的财务压力对患者及其家庭福祉的不利影响。它在癌症患者中非常普遍,并与较差的临床结果有关。
总结前列腺癌、膀胱癌和肾癌患者的 FT 相关文献,并提出未来 FT 研究的框架。
根据系统评价和荟萃分析的首选报告项目(PRISMA)声明,使用 PubMed、Scopus、Embase、CINAHL 和 Cochrane 数据库,检索了截至 2020 年 5 月之前发表的报告前列腺癌、膀胱癌或肾癌患者 FT 为主要或次要结局或协变量的主要手稿和摘要。在 629 个标题中,有 19 项、10 项和 2 项研究分别符合前列腺癌、膀胱癌和肾癌的纳入标准,并被纳入(24 篇不同的文章)。
协变量、方法和 FT 测量的异质性很大。与 FT 常见相关的因素包括诊断时年龄较小、黑种人、社会经济地位较低、教育程度较低和农村地区。FT 通常与生活质量较低和不遵医嘱有关。FT 在具有全民健康覆盖的国家和没有全民健康覆盖的国家的患者中都很常见,尽管这些费用的性质不同。
尽管文献匮乏,但有证据表明,FT 在前列腺癌和膀胱癌患者中很常见,而在肾癌患者中仍未得到充分描述。未来的工作将受益于纳入正式的 FT 框架、使用经过验证的 FT 工具来一致地描述 FT,并将 FT 测量纳入报告泌尿生殖系统癌症患者的结果中。
财务毒性影响许多前列腺癌、膀胱癌和肾癌患者;然而,这种毒性的研究还很不足。它与生活质量下降以及药物和治疗的依从性降低有关。