Author: Politi, Mary C.; Yen, Renata W.; Elwyn, Glyn; O'Malley, A. James; Saunders, Catherine H.; Schubbe, Danielle; Forcino, Rachel; Durand, Marieâ€Anne
Title: Women Who Are Young, Nonâ€White, and with Lower Socioeconomic Status Report Higher Financial Toxicity up to 1 Year After Breast Cancer Surgery: A Mixedâ€Effects Regression Analysis Cord-id: 7qxeln54 Document date: 2020_10_12
ID: 7qxeln54
Snippet: PURPOSE: We examined selfâ€reported financial toxicity and outâ€ofâ€pocket expenses among adult women with breast cancer. METHODS: Patients spoke English, Spanish, or Mandarin Chinese, were aged 18+ years, had stage I–IIIA breast cancer, and were eligible for breastâ€conserving and mastectomy surgery. Participants completed surveys about outâ€ofâ€pocket costs and financial toxicity at 1 week, 12 weeks, and 1 year postsurgery. RESULTS: Three hundred ninetyâ€five of 448 eligible patients
Document: PURPOSE: We examined selfâ€reported financial toxicity and outâ€ofâ€pocket expenses among adult women with breast cancer. METHODS: Patients spoke English, Spanish, or Mandarin Chinese, were aged 18+ years, had stage I–IIIA breast cancer, and were eligible for breastâ€conserving and mastectomy surgery. Participants completed surveys about outâ€ofâ€pocket costs and financial toxicity at 1 week, 12 weeks, and 1 year postsurgery. RESULTS: Three hundred ninetyâ€five of 448 eligible patients (88.2%) from the parent trial completed surveys. Excluding those reporting zero costs, crude mean ± SD outâ€ofâ€pocket costs were $1,512 ± $2,074 at 1 week, $2,609 ± $6,369 at 12 weeks, and $3,308 ± $5,000 at 1 year postsurgery. Controlling for surgery, cancer stage, and demographics with surgeon and clinic as random effects, higher outâ€ofâ€pocket costs were associated with higher financial toxicity 1 week and 12 weeks postsurgery (p < .001). Lower socioeconomic status (SES) was associated with lower outâ€ofâ€pocket costs at each time point (p = .002–.013). One week postsurgery, participants with lower SES reported financial toxicity scores 1.02 points higher than participants with higher SES (95% confidence interval [CI], 0.08–1.95). Black and nonâ€White/nonâ€Black participants reported financial toxicity scores 1.91 (95% CI, 0.46–3.37) and 2.55 (95% CI, 1.11–3.99) points higher than White participants. Older (65+ years) participants reported financial toxicity scores 2.58 points lower than younger (<65 years) participants (95% CI, −3.41, −1.74). Younger participants reported significantly higher financial toxicity at each time point. DISCUSSION: Younger age, nonâ€White race, and lower SES were associated with higher financial toxicity regardless of costs. Outâ€ofâ€pocket costs increased over time and were positively associated with financial toxicity. Future work should reduce the impact of cancer care costs among vulnerable groups. IMPLICATIONS FOR PRACTICE: This study was one of the first to examine outâ€ofâ€pocket costs and financial toxicity up to 1 year after breast cancer surgery. Younger age, Black race, race other than Black or White, and lower socioeconomic status were associated with higher financial toxicity. Findings highlight the importance of addressing patients’ financial toxicity in several ways, particularly for groups vulnerable to its effects.
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