ACA Medicaid Expansion Association With Racial Disparity Reductions in Timely Cancer Treatment

被引:17
|
作者
Adamson, Blythe J. S. [1 ,2 ]
Cohen, Aaron B. [1 ,3 ]
Gross, Cary P. [4 ,5 ]
Estevez, Melissa [1 ]
Magee, Kelly [1 ]
Williams, Erin [1 ]
Meropol, Neal J. [1 ,6 ]
Davidoff, Amy J. [4 ,7 ]
机构
[1] Flatiron Hlth Inc, 233 Spring St,Fifth Fl, New York, NY 10025 USA
[2] Univ Washington, Seattle, WA 98195 USA
[3] NYU, Sch Med, New York, NY USA
[4] Yale Sch Med, Yale Canc Ctr, Canc Outcomes Publ Policy & Effectiveness Res COP, New Haven, CT USA
[5] Yale Sch Med, Natl Clinician Scholar Program, New Haven, CT USA
[6] Case Comprehens Canc Ctr, Cleveland, OH USA
[7] Yale Sch Publ Hlth, New Haven, CT USA
关键词
BREAST-CANCER; TREATMENT INITIATION; INSURANCE-COVERAGE; DIAGNOSTIC DELAY; CARE; SURVIVAL; HEALTH; DISTRESS; TUMOR;
D O I
10.37765/ajmc.2021.88700
中图分类号
R19 [保健组织与事业(卫生事业管理)];
学科分类号
摘要
OBJECTIVES: Racial disparities in cancer care and outcomes remain a societal challenge. Medicaid expansion through the Affordable Care Act was intended to improve health care access and equity. This study aimed to assess whether state Medicaid expansions were associated with a reduction in racial disparities in timely treatment among patients diagnosed with advanced cancer. STUDY DESIGN: This difference-in-differences study analyzed deidentified electronic health record-derived data. Patients aged 18 to 64 years with advanced or metastatic cancers diagnosed between January 1, 2011, and January 31, 2019, and receiving systemic therapy were included. METHODS: The primary end point was receipt of timely treatment, defined as first-line systemic therapy starting within 30 days after diagnosis of advanced or metastatic disease. Racial disparity was defined as adjusted percentage-point (PP) difference for Black vs White patients, adjusted for age, sex, practice setting, cancer type, stage, insurance marketplace, and area unemployment rate, with time and state fixed effects. RESULTS: The study included 30,310 patients (12.3% Black race). Without Medicaid expansion, Black patients were less likely to receive timely treatment than White patients (43.7% vs 48.4%; adjusted difference, -4.8 PP; P < .001). With Medicaid expansion, this disparity was diminished and lost significance (49.7% vs 50.5%; adjusted difference, -0.8 PP; P = .605). The adjusted difference-in-differences estimate was a 3.9 PP reduction in racial disparity (95% CI, 0.1-7.7 PP; P = .045). CONCLUSIONS: Medicaid expansion was associated with reduced Black-White racial disparities in receipt of timely systemic treatment for patients with advanced or metastatic cancers.
引用
收藏
页码:274 / +
页数:26
相关论文
共 47 条
  • [11] Impact of Medicaid Expansion on Rhinologic Cancer Presentation, Treatment, and Outcomes
    Irace, Alexandria L.
    Sharma, Rahul K.
    Smith, Timothy L.
    Stewart, Michael G.
    Gudis, David A.
    LARYNGOSCOPE, 2023, 133 (01) : 43 - 50
  • [12] The Association Between Oncology Outreach and Timely Treatment for Rural Patients with Breast Cancer: A Claims-Based Approach
    Scodari, Bruno T.
    Schaefer, Andrew P.
    Kapadia, Nirav S.
    Brooks, Gabriel A.
    O'Malley, A. James
    Moen, Erika L.
    ANNALS OF SURGICAL ONCOLOGY, 2024, 31 (07) : 4349 - 4360
  • [13] Racial Disparity in Colorectal Cancer: The Role of Equal Treatment
    Laryea, Jonathan A.
    Siegel, Eric
    Klimberg, Suzanne
    DISEASES OF THE COLON & RECTUM, 2014, 57 (03) : 295 - 302
  • [14] Identifying factors influencing delays in breast cancer treatment in Kentucky following the 2014 Medicaid expansion
    Bhutiani, Neal
    Hicks, Adam C.
    Huang, Bin
    Chen, Quan
    Tucker, Thomas C.
    McMasters, Kelly M.
    Ajkay, Nicolas
    JOURNAL OF SURGICAL ONCOLOGY, 2020, 121 (08) : 1191 - 1200
  • [15] Association of Medicaid expansion with 2-year survival and time to treatment initiation in gastrointestinal cancer patients: A National Cancer Database study
    Mobley, Erin M.
    Chen, Guanming
    Xu, Jie
    Edgar, Lauren
    Pather, Keouna
    Daly, Meghan C.
    Awad, Ziad T.
    Parker, Alexander S.
    Xie, Zhigang
    Suk, Ryan
    Mathews, Simon
    Hong, Young-Rock
    JOURNAL OF SURGICAL ONCOLOGY, 2023, 128 (08) : 1285 - 1301
  • [16] Association Between Medicaid Expansion and Diagnosis and Management of Colon Cancer
    Hoehn, Richard S.
    Rieser, Caroline J.
    Phelos, Heather
    Sabik, Lindsay M.
    Nassour, Ibrahim
    Paniccia, Alessandro
    Zureikat, Amer H.
    Tohme, Samer T.
    JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN COLLEGE OF SURGEONS, 2021, 232 (02) : 146 - +
  • [17] Association Between Medicaid Expansion and Insurance Status, Risk Group, Receipt, and Refusal of Treatment Among Men with Prostate Cancer
    Patel, Tej A.
    Jain, Bhav
    Dee, Edward Christopher
    Kohli, Khushi
    Ranganathan, Sruthi
    Janopaul-Naylor, James
    Mahal, Brandon A.
    Yamoah, Kosj
    Mcbride, Sean M.
    Nguyen, Paul L.
    Chino, Fumiko
    Muralidhar, Vinayak
    Lam, Miranda B.
    Vapiwala, Neha
    CANCERS, 2025, 17 (03)
  • [18] Association of Medicaid Expansion With Insurance Coverage Among Children With Cancer
    Barnes, Justin M.
    Barker, Abigail R.
    King, Allison A.
    Johnson, Kimberly J.
    JAMA PEDIATRICS, 2020, 174 (06) : 581 - 591
  • [19] Effect of Medicaid Expansion in Reducing Racial Disparities in Early Onset Colorectal Cancer
    Rahman, Shafia
    Patel, Riya
    Liu, Jianyou
    Gaba, Anu
    Maitra, Radhashree
    Acuna-Villaorduna, Ana
    Kim, Mimi
    Goel, Sanjay
    JOURNAL OF RACIAL AND ETHNIC HEALTH DISPARITIES, 2023, 11 (5) : 2981 - 2988
  • [20] An assessment of the association between patient characteristics and timely lung cancer treatment
    Powell, Adam C.
    Pickerell, Jeremy T.
    Long, James W.
    Loy, Bryan A.
    Mirhadi, Amin J.
    CANCER CAUSES & CONTROL, 2024, 35 (08) : 1181 - 1190