Impact of Medicaid expansion on the multimodal treatment of biliary tract cancer

Author:

Ortiz Rueda Belisario1,Endo Yutaka1ORCID,Tsilimigras Diamantis I.1ORCID,Araujo Lima Henrique12,Munir Muhammad Musaab1,Woldesenbet Selamawit1,Dillhoff Mary1,Ejaz Aslam1ORCID,Cloyd Jordan1,Pawlik Timothy M.1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Surgery The Ohio State University Wexner Medical Center and James Comprehensive Cancer Center Columbus Ohio USA

2. Department of Surgery Federal University of Minas Gerais School of Medicine Belo Horizonte Brazil

Abstract

AbstractIntroductionThe impact of Medicaid expansion (ME) on the treatment of patients with cancer remains controversial, especially individuals requiring complex multidisciplinary care. We sought to evaluate the impact of Medicaid expansion (ME) on receipt of multimodal care, including surgical resection, for Stage I–III biliary tract cancer (BTC).MethodsPatients diagnosed with BTC between 40 and 65 years of age were identified from the National Cancer Database and divided into pre‐ (2008–2012) and post‐ (2015–2018) ME cohorts. Difference‐in‐difference (DID) analysis was used to determine the impact of ME on the utilization of surgery and multimodal chemotherapy and/or radiotherapy treatment for BTC.ResultsAmong 12,415 patients with BTC (extrahepatic, n = 5622, 45.3%; intrahepatic, n = 4352, 35.1%; gallbladder, n = 1944, 15.7%; overlapping, n = 497, 4.0%), 5835 (47.0%) and 6580 (53.0%) patients were diagnosed before versus after ME, respectively. Overall utilization of surgery (OR 1.13, 95% CI 1.02–1.26) and multimodality therapy (OR 1.13, 95% CI 1.01–1.27) increased in states that adopted ME. Utilization of surgery among uninsured/Medicaid patients in ME states increased relative to patients living in non‐ME states (∆+10.1%, p = 0.01). Similarly, the use of multimodal treatment increased among uninsured/Medicaid patients living in ME versus non‐ME states (∆+6.4%, p = 0.04); in contrast, there were no difference among patients with other insurance statuses (overall: ∆+1.5%, private: ∆−2.0%, other: ∆+3.9%, all p > 0.5). Uninsured/Medicaid patients with BTC who lived in a ME state had a lower risk of long‐term death in the post‐ME era (HR 0.81, 95% CI 0.67–0.98; p = 0.03).ConclusionsImplementation of ME positively impacted survival among patients who underwent surgical and multimodal treatment for Stage I–III BTC.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Oncology,General Medicine,Surgery

Cited by 1 articles. 订阅此论文施引文献 订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献

1. New trends in diagnosis and management of gallbladder carcinoma;World Journal of Gastrointestinal Oncology;2024-01-15

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