Reallocating Cervical Cancer Preventive Service Spending from Low- to High-Value Clinical Scenarios

Author:

Rockwell Michelle S.1ORCID,Armbruster Shannon D.2ORCID,Capucao Jillian C.3ORCID,Russell Kyle B.3ORCID,Rockwell John A.4ORCID,Perkins Karen E.1ORCID,Huffstetler Alison N.56ORCID,Mafi John N.7ORCID,Fendrick A. Mark8ORCID

Affiliation:

1. 1Department of Family and Community Medicine, Virginia Tech Carilion School of Medicine, Roanoke, Virginia.

2. 2Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, Virginia Tech Carilion School of Medicine, Roanoke, Virginia.

3. 3Virginia Health Information, Richmond, Virginia.

4. 4Department of Medicine, Carilion Clinic.

5. 5The Robert Graham Center, Washington, District of Columbia.

6. 6Department of Family Medicine and Population Health, Virginia Commonwealth University, Richmond, Virginia.

7. 7Division of Internal Medicine and Health Services Research, David Geffen School of Medicine, UCLA, Los Angeles, California.

8. 8Center for Value-Based Insurance Design, Department of Internal Medicine, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Michigan.

Abstract

Abstract Timely follow-up care after an abnormal cervical cancer screening test result is critical to the prevention and early diagnosis of cervical cancer. The current inadequate and inequitable delivery of these potentially life-saving services is attributed to several factors, including patient out-of-pocket costs. Waiving of consumer cost-sharing for follow-up testing (e.g., colposcopy and related cervical services) is likely to improve access and uptake, especially among underserved populations. One approach to defray the incremental costs of providing more generous coverage for follow-up testing is reducing expenditures on “low-value” cervical cancer screening services. To explore the potential fiscal implications of a policy that redirects cervical cancer screening resources from potentially low- to high-value clinical scenarios, we analyzed 2019 claims from the Virginia All-Payer Claims Database to quantify (i) total spending on low-value cervical cancer screening and (ii) out-of-pocket costs associated with colposcopy and related cervical services among commercially insured Virginians. In a cohort of 1,806,921 female patients (ages 48.1 ± 24.8 years), 295,193 claims for cervical cancer screening were reported, 100,567 (34.0%) of which were determined to be low-value ($4,394,361 total; $4,172,777 for payers and $221,584 out-of-pocket [$2/patient]). Claims for 52,369 colposcopy and related cervical services were reported ($40,994,016 total; $33,457,518 for payers and $7,536,498 out-of-pocket [$144/patient]). These findings suggest that reallocating savings incurred from unnecessary spending to fund more generous coverage of necessary follow-up care is a feasible approach to enhancing cervical cancer prevention equity and outcomes. Prevention Relevance: Out-of-pocket fees are a barrier to follow-up care after an abnormal cervical cancer screening test. Among commercially insured Virginians, out-of-pocket costs for follow-up services averaged $144/patient; 34% of cervical cancer screenings were classified as low value. Reallocating low-value cervical cancer screening expenditures to enhance coverage for follow-up care can improve screening outcomes. See related Spotlight, p. 363

Publisher

American Association for Cancer Research (AACR)

Subject

Cancer Research,Oncology

Reference33 articles.

1. Cancer Moonshot progress. NCI

2. Closing gaps in cancer screening: Connecting people, communities, and systems to improve equity and access: President's Cancer Panel

3. Coverage of certain preventive services under the Affordable Care Act

4. Utilization impact of cost-sharing elimination for preventive care services: a rapid review;Norris;Med Care Res Rev,2022

5. Access to preventive services without cost-sharing: evidence from the Affordable Care Act. Office of the Assistant Secretary for Planning and Evaluation

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