Newswise, February 13, 2016--Survivors of cancer pay thousands
of dollars in excess medical expenditures every year, with the excess financial
burden varying by age and cancer site, according to a study by the American Cancer
Society study.
The study, appearing in the Journal of the National Cancer
Institute, says targeted efforts will be important to reduce the economic
burden of cancer.
As a group, cancer survivors (estimated to number 14.5 million
in the United States in 2014) face greater economic burden, including medical
expenditures and productivity losses. But relatively little is known about
whether that burden varies by cancer site compared to similar individuals
without a cancer history.
Researchers led by Zhiyuan 'Jason' Zheng, PhD, senior health
services researcher in the Surveillance and Health Services Research program at
the American Cancer Society, used 2008 to 2012 Medical Expenditure Panel Survey
data to measure excess economic burden attributable to the three most prevalent
cancers.
They calculated excess annual medical expenditures and productivity
losses (employment disability, missed work days, and days stayed in bed) for
colorectal (n = 540), female breast (n = 1568), and prostate (n = 1170) cancer
survivors, and for those without a cancer history (n = 109,423).
They
stratified the data by cancer site and age (nonelderly: 18-64 years vs elderly:
?65 years), and controlled for age, sex, race/ethnicity, marital status,
education, number of comorbidities, and geographic region.
They found cancer survivors experienced annual excess medical
expenditures compared with individuals without a cancer history.
For the
nonelderly population, annual excess expenditures were $8657 for colorectal
cancer; $5119 for breast cancer; and $3586 for prostate cancer. For the elderly
population, annual excess expenditures were: colorectal: $4913; breast: $2288;
prostate: $3524.
Nonelderly colorectal and breast cancer survivors were more
likely to have employment disability as well as productivity loss at work (7.2
days) and at home (4.5 days). In contrast, elderly survivors of all three
cancer sites had comparable productivity losses as those without a cancer
history.
"This study helps us quantify the excess economic burden
associated with the three major cancer sites," said Dr. Zheng.
"Understanding this burden is an important step to shape health care
policies to target areas where cancer survivors are most vulnerable."
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Article: Annual Medical Expenditure and Productivity Loss
Among Colorectal, Female Breast, and Prostate Cancer Survivors in the United
States JNCI J Natl Cancer Inst (2016) 108 (5): djv382 doi: 10.1093/jnci/djv382
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