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Financial toxicity risk among adult patients undergoing cancer surgery in the United States: An analysis of the National Inpatient Sample

Authors :
Ayesha Farooq
Kota Sahara
Timothy M. Pawlik
Anghela Z. Paredes
Rittal Mehta
J. Madison Hyer
Diamantis I. Tsilimigras
Lu Wu
Jordan M. Cloyd
Aslam Ejaz
Katiuscha Merath
Source :
Journal of surgical oncology. 120(3)
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVE Financial hardship occurring as a result of cancer treatment has been termed financial toxicity and is an established side effect of the cancer treatment. We investigated the risk of financial toxicity among patients undergoing surgery for gastrointestinal cancers. METHODS All uninsured and privately insured patients who underwent surgery for a gastrointestinal cancer were identified from the National Inpatient Sample. Publicly available government data were used estimate income, food expenditure, and average maximum out-of-pocket expenditure. Risk of financial toxicity was defined as health expenditure ≥ 40% of postsubsistence income. RESULTS Among the 78 545 patients in the analytic cohort, 73 305 individuals had private insurance while 5240 patients were uninsured. Overall median hospital charges were $58 651 (IQR: $37 912-$95 379). Approximately 90% of uninsured and 10% of privately insured patients were at risk of financial toxicity. At the subpopulation level, patients in the lowest income quartile, undergoing emergency surgery, black or hispanic individuals, and those undergoing surgery for esophageal or colon cancer were more likely to experience catastrophic costs following surgery (P

Details

ISSN :
10969098
Volume :
120
Issue :
3
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of surgical oncology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....f88306173a6002133fbef3639b8f06f9