Factors Determining Utilization of Stem Cell Transplant for Initial Therapy of Multiple Myeloma by Patient Race: Exploring Intra-racial Healthcare Disparities.

Author:

Ailawadhi Sikander1ORCID,Adu Yaw2ORCID,Frank Ryan1,Das Saurav1ORCID,Hodge David1,Fernandez Andre1,Flott Caitlyn1,Elliott Jamie1,Parrondo Ricardo1ORCID,Sher Taimur1,Roy Vivek1ORCID,Chanan-Khan Asher1

Affiliation:

1. Mayo Clinic

2. Texas Tech University Health Sciences Center School of Medicine

Abstract

Abstract

Multiple myeloma (MM) therapeutics have evolved tremendously in recent years, with significant improvement in patient outcomes. As newer treatment options are developed, stem cell transplant (SCT) remains an important modality that provides excellent disease control and delays the progression of disease. Over the years, SCT use has increased overall in the U.S., but two distinct gaps remain, including suboptimal use overall, and racial-ethnic disparities. We evaluated the National Cancer Database (NCDB) to study what sociodemographic factors might play a role within a given racial-ethnic group leading to disparate SCT utilization, such that targeted approaches can be developed to optimize SCT use for all. In nearly 112,000 cases belonging to mutually exclusive categories of non-Hispanic Whites (NHW), non-Hispanic Blacks (NHB), Hispanics, non-Hispanic Asians (NHA), and others, we found certain factors including age, comorbidity index, payor type, facility type (academic vs. community) and facility volume to be uniformly associated with SCT use for all the racial-ethnic groups, while gender was not significant for any of the groups. There were several other factors which had a differential impact on SCT utilization among the various race-ethnicity groups studied, including year of diagnosis (significant for NHW, NHB and Hispanics), income level (significant for NHW and Hispanics), literacy level (significant for NHW and NHB), and geographic location of the treatment facility (significant for NHW and NHA). The suboptimal SCT utilization overall in the U.S., suggests that there may be room for improvement for all, even including the majority NHW, while we continue to work on factors that lead to disparities for the traditionally underserved populations. This study helps identify sociodemographic factors that may play a role specifically in each group and paves the way to devise targeted solutions such that resource utilization and impact can be maximized.

Publisher

Research Square Platform LLC

Reference29 articles.

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