Department of Medicine, University of Calgary, Calgary, Alberta, Canada.
Cumming School of Medicine, University of Calgary, Calgary, Alberta, Canada.
Gastroenterology. 2022 Apr;162(4):1098-1110.e2. doi: 10.1053/j.gastro.2021.12.244. Epub 2021 Dec 16.
BACKGROUND & AIMS: The management of gastrointestinal (GI) cancers is associated with high health care spending. We estimated trends in United States (US) health care spending for patients with GI cancers between 1996 and 2016 and developed projections to 2030.
We used economic data, adjusted for inflation, developed by the Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluations for the Disease Expenditure Project. Corresponding US age-adjusted prevalence of GI cancers was estimated from the Global Burden of Diseases Study. Prevalence-adjusted temporal trends in the US health care spending in patients with GI cancers, stratified by cancer site, age, and setting of care, were estimated using joinpoint regression, expressed as annual percentage change (APC) with 95% confidence intervals (CIs). Autoregressive integrated moving average models were used to project spending to 2030.
In 2016, total spending for GI cancers was primarily attributable to colorectal ($10.50 billion; 95% CI, $9.35-$11.70 billion) and pancreatic cancer ($2.55 billion; 95% CI, $2.23-$2.82 billion), and primarily for inpatient care (64.5%). Despite increased total spending, more recent per-patient spending for pancreatic (APC 2008-2016, -1.4%; 95% CI, -2.2% to -0.7%), gallbladder/biliary tract (APC 2010-2016, -4.3%; 95% CI, -4.8% to -3.8%), and gastric cancer (APC 2011-2016, -4.4%; 95% CI, -5.8% to -2.9%) decreased. Increasing price and intensity of care provision was the largest driver of higher expenditures. By 2030, it is projected more than $21 billion annually will be spent on GI cancer management.
Total spending for GI cancers in the US is substantial and projected to increase. Expenditures are primarily driven by inpatient care for colorectal cancer, although per-capita spending trends differ by GI cancer type.
胃肠道(GI)癌症的治疗与高额医疗支出相关。我们评估了 1996 年至 2016 年美国 GI 癌症患者的医疗支出趋势,并对 2030 年进行了预测。
我们使用了健康计量评估研究所为疾病支出项目制定的经济数据,并进行了通胀调整。GI 癌症的美国年龄调整患病率是根据全球疾病负担研究估计的。使用 joinpoint 回归估计了按癌症部位、年龄和治疗场所分层的 GI 癌症患者的美国医疗支出的时间趋势,以年度百分比变化(APC)和 95%置信区间(CI)表示。自回归综合移动平均模型用于预测到 2030 年的支出。
2016 年,GI 癌症的总支出主要归因于结直肠癌(105 亿美元;95%CI,93.50 亿至 117 亿美元)和胰腺癌(25.5 亿美元;95%CI,22.30 亿至 28.20 亿美元),主要来自住院治疗(64.5%)。尽管总支出增加,但最近胰腺癌(2008-2016 年 APC,-1.4%;95%CI,-2.2%至-0.7%)、胆囊/胆管(2010-2016 年 APC,-4.3%;95%CI,-4.8%至-3.8%)和胃癌(2011-2016 年 APC,-4.4%;95%CI,-5.8%至-2.9%)的每位患者的支出呈下降趋势。提供更高价格和强度的医疗服务是支出增加的最大驱动因素。到 2030 年,预计每年将花费超过 210 亿美元用于 GI 癌症治疗。
美国 GI 癌症的总支出相当可观,并预计将增加。支出主要由结直肠癌的住院治疗驱动,尽管按 GI 癌症类型划分,人均支出趋势有所不同。