Department of Epidemiology and Biostatistics, Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center, New York, NY, United States.
Department of Medicine, Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center, New York, NY, United States.
Oncologist. 2024 Jun 3;29(6):527-533. doi: 10.1093/oncolo/oyae035.
Because the markups on cancer drugs vary by payor, providers' financial incentive to use high-price drugs is differential according to each patient's insurance type. We evaluated the association between patient insurer (commercial vs Medicaid) and the use of high-priced cancer treatments.
We linked cancer registry, administrative claims, and demographic data for individuals diagnosed with cancer in North Carolina from 2004 to 2011, with either commercial or Medicaid insurance. We selected cancers with multiple FDA-approved, guideline-recommended chemotherapy options and large price differences between treatment options: advanced colorectal, lung, and head and neck cancer. The outcome was a receipt of a higher-priced option, and the exposure was insurer: commercial versus Medicaid. We estimated risk ratios (RRs) for the association between insurer and higher-priced treatment using log-binomial models with inverse probability of exposure weights.
Of 812 patients, 209 (26%) had Medicaid. The unadjusted risk of receiving higher-priced treatment was 36% (215/603) for commercially insured and 27% (57/209) for Medicaid insured (RR: 1.31, 95% CI: 1.02-1.67). After adjustment for confounders the association was attenuated (RR: 1.15, 95% CI: 0.81-1.65). Exploratory subgroup analysis suggested that commercial insurance was associated with increased receipt of higher-priced treatment among patients treated by non-NCI-designated providers (RR: 1.53, 95% CI: 1.14-2.04).
Individuals with Medicaid and commercial insurance received high-priced treatments in similar proportion, after accounting for differences in case mix. However, modification by provider characteristics suggests that insurance type may influence treatment selection for some patient groups. Further work is needed to determine the relationship between insurance status and newer, high-price drugs such as immune-oncology agents.
由于癌症药物的加成因支付方而异,因此根据每位患者的保险类型,提供者使用高价药物的经济激励是不同的。我们评估了患者保险(商业保险与医疗补助)与高价癌症治疗的使用之间的关联。
我们将北卡罗来纳州 2004 年至 2011 年期间诊断患有癌症的个人的癌症登记处、行政索赔和人口统计数据与商业或医疗补助保险相联系。我们选择了具有多种 FDA 批准、指南推荐的化疗选择和治疗方案之间存在较大价格差异的癌症:晚期结直肠癌、肺癌和头颈部癌症。结果是接受了更高价格的选择,而暴露因素是保险:商业保险与医疗补助。我们使用逆概率暴露权重的对数二项式模型估计了保险公司与更高价格治疗之间的关联的风险比(RR)。
在 812 名患者中,有 209 名(26%)拥有医疗补助。未调整的接受更高价格治疗的风险为商业保险患者的 36%(215/603)和医疗补助保险患者的 27%(57/209)(RR:1.31,95%CI:1.02-1.67)。调整混杂因素后,相关性减弱(RR:1.15,95%CI:0.81-1.65)。探索性亚组分析表明,在非 NCI 指定的提供者治疗的患者中,商业保险与接受更高价格治疗的可能性增加有关(RR:1.53,95%CI:1.14-2.04)。
在考虑病例组合差异后,拥有医疗补助和商业保险的个人接受高价治疗的比例相似。然而,提供者特征的改变表明,对于某些患者群体,保险类型可能会影响治疗选择。需要进一步的工作来确定保险状况与新型高价药物(如免疫肿瘤药物)之间的关系。