Immune-Based Cancer Treatment: Addressing Disparities in Access and Outcomes

Author:

Osarogiagbon Raymond U.1,Sineshaw Helmneh M.2,Unger Joseph M.3,Acuña-Villaorduña Ana4,Goel Sanjay4

Affiliation:

1. Multidisciplinary Thoracic Oncology Program, Baptist Cancer Center, Memphis, TN

2. Merck & Co., Inc, Kenilworth, NJ

3. Health Services Research, Public Health Sciences Division, Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center Affiliate, University of Washington, Seattle, WA

4. Montefiore Medical Center, Albert Einstein College of Medicine, Bronx, NY

Abstract

Avoidable differences in the care and outcomes of patients with cancer (i.e., cancer care disparities) emerge or worsen with discoveries of new, more effective approaches to cancer diagnosis and treatment. The rapidly expanding use of immunotherapy for many different cancers across the spectrum from late to early stages has, predictably, been followed by emerging evidence of disparities in access to these highly effective but expensive treatments. The danger that these new treatments will further widen preexisting cancer care and outcome disparities requires urgent corrective intervention. Using a multilevel etiologic framework that categorizes the targets of intervention at the individual, provider, health care system, and social policy levels, we discuss options for a comprehensive approach to prevent and, where necessary, eliminate disparities in access to the clinical trials that are defining the optimal use of immunotherapy for cancer, as well as its safe use in routine care among appropriately diverse populations. We make the case that, contrary to the traditional focus on the individual level in descriptive reports of health care disparities, there is sequentially greater leverage at the provider, health care system, and social policy levels to overcome the challenge of cancer care and outcomes disparities, including access to immunotherapy. We also cite examples of effective government-sponsored and policy-level interventions, such as the National Cancer Institute Minority-Underserved Community Oncology Research Program and the Affordable Care Act, that have expanded clinical trial access and access to high-quality cancer care in general.

Publisher

American Society of Clinical Oncology (ASCO)

Subject

General Medicine

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