Assessing the Coverage of US Cancer Center Primary Catchment Areas

Author:

Leader Amy E.1,McNair Christopher2ORCID,Yurick Christina3,Huesser Matthew3ORCID,Schade Elizabeth3,Stimmel Emily E.4,Lerman Caryn5ORCID,Knudsen Karen E.26

Affiliation:

1. 1Division of Population Science, Medical Oncology, Sidney Kimmel Cancer Center, Thomas Jefferson University, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.

2. 2Department of Cancer Biology, Sidney Kimmel Cancer Center, Thomas Jefferson University, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.

3. 3Sidney Kimmel Cancer Center, Thomas Jefferson University, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.

4. 4Association of American Cancer Institutes, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania.

5. 5USC Norris Comprehensive Cancer Center, Los Angeles, California.

6. 6American Cancer Society, Atlanta, Georgia.

Abstract

Abstract Background: Cancer centers are expected to engage communities and reduce the burden of cancer in their catchment areas. However, the extent to which cancer centers adequately reach the entire US population is unknown. Methods: We surveyed all members of the Association of American Cancer Institutes (N = 102 cancer centers) to document and map each cancer center's primary catchment area. Catchment area descriptions were aggregated to the county level. Catchment area coverage scores were calculated for each county and choropleths generated representing coverage across the US. Similar analyses were used to overlay US population density, cancer incidence, and cancer-related mortality compared with each county's cancer center catchment area coverage. Results: Roughly 85% of US counties were included in at least one cancer center's primary catchment area. However, 15% of US counties, or roughly 25 million Americans, do not reside in a catchment area. When catchment area coverage was integrated with population density, cancer incidence, and cancer-related mortality metrics, geographical trends in both over- and undercoverage were apparent. Conclusions: Geographic gaps in cancer center catchment area coverage exist and may be propagating cancer disparities. Efforts to ensure coverage to all Americans should be a priority of cancer center leadership. Impact: This is the first known geographic analysis and interpretation of the primary catchment areas of all US-based cancer centers and identifies key geographic gaps important to target for disparities reduction. See related commentary by Lieberman-Cribbin and Taioli, p. 949

Funder

NIH

Publisher

American Association for Cancer Research (AACR)

Subject

Oncology,Epidemiology

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