Rosi-Schumacher Mattie, Patel Shivam, Phan Chandat, Goyal Neerav
Department of Otolaryngology-Head and Neck Surgery, Jacobs School of Medicine and Biomedical Sciences, The State University of New York at Buffalo, Buffalo, NY, USA.
Pennsylvania State University College of Medicine, Hershey, PA, USA.
Clin Med Insights Oncol. 2023 Jan 23;17:11795549221147730. doi: 10.1177/11795549221147730. eCollection 2023.
Cancer treatment often results in financial burdens for patients including healthcare costs as well as treatment-induced disability leading to "financial toxicity" (FT) and decreased quality of life. The purpose of this review is to describe FT related to head and neck cancer (HNC) treatment, including quantifications of direct and indirect costs and descriptions of measurement tools.
PubMed, Embase, Cochrane Library, and Web of Science databases were searched to identify articles published before April 2022. Full-text published studies were included if they assessed direct or indirect costs of HNC treatment; studies were excluded if they did not focus on HNC or financial burden. The risk of bias was assessed, and the results of the studies were synthesized.
Database searches yielded 530 unique studies, and 33 studies met the criteria for inclusion. Medical expenses for patients with HNC were higher than for patients with other cancers or controls in several studies. Major surgical procedures, neck dissection, free-flap reconstruction, and intensive care unit admission increased hospital costs. Trimodal therapy with surgery plus chemoradiation represented the most expensive treatment, and chemoradiation increased complication-related health care costs. In several studies, >50% of patients treated for HNC were disabled and did not return to work. One of the greatest contributors to the indirect cost of HNC treatment is the loss of lifetime wages. Patients with HNC are at risk for depression, anxiety, and social isolation, which are linked to a decreased quality of life and treatment non-adherence. The only tools used to assess FT in patients with HNC are the Comprehensive Score for financial Toxicity (COST) and the Financial Index of Toxicity (FIT).
Financial toxicity is highly prevalent among patients with HNC. Further research is needed to validate the assessment tools for quantifying FT in HNC patients.
癌症治疗常常给患者带来经济负担,包括医疗费用以及治疗导致的残疾,进而引发“经济毒性”(FT)并降低生活质量。本综述的目的是描述与头颈癌(HNC)治疗相关的经济毒性,包括直接和间接成本的量化以及测量工具的描述。
检索了PubMed、Embase、Cochrane图书馆和科学网数据库,以识别2022年4月之前发表的文章。如果全文发表的研究评估了HNC治疗的直接或间接成本,则将其纳入;如果研究未聚焦于HNC或经济负担,则将其排除。评估了偏倚风险,并综合了研究结果。
数据库检索产生了530项独特研究,33项研究符合纳入标准。在多项研究中,HNC患者的医疗费用高于其他癌症患者或对照组。 major手术、颈部清扫、游离皮瓣重建和重症监护病房入院增加了医院成本。手术加放化疗的三联疗法是最昂贵的治疗方法,放化疗增加了与并发症相关的医疗保健成本。在多项研究中,接受HNC治疗的患者中有超过50%出现残疾且未重返工作岗位。HNC治疗间接成本的最大贡献因素之一是终身工资损失。HNC患者有患抑郁症、焦虑症和社会隔离的风险,这与生活质量下降和治疗依从性降低有关。用于评估HNC患者经济毒性的唯一工具是经济毒性综合评分(COST)和毒性财务指数(FIT)。
经济毒性在HNC患者中非常普遍。需要进一步研究以验证用于量化HNC患者经济毒性的评估工具。