Financial toxicity in gynecologic oncology: a multi-practice survey

Author:

Smith Anna JoORCID,Sharma Maya H,Powell Kristina,Doherty Meredith,Hinkle Stefanie N,Ko Emily MeichunORCID

Abstract

BackgroundFinancial toxicity is associated with worse cancer outcomes, including lower survival.ObjectiveTo characterize the prevalence of, and patient risk factors for, financial toxicity among gynecologic oncology patients in a multi-site health system.MethodsWe identified patients seen in University of Pennsylvania gynecologic oncology practices between January 2020 and February 2022 with a patient portal account. We sent a survey to all alive patients twice between March and April 2022, including the 11-item Comprehensive Score for Financial Toxicity (COST) tool. We compared differences between patients reporting high (COST score <26) and low financial toxicity (COST score ≥26) in Χ2and regression analyses.ResultsOf 8239 patients, 6925 had a portal account, and 498 completed the survey for 7.2% response rate. 44% had a COST score <26, indicating financial toxicity. Patients with high financial toxicity were more likely to be younger (mean age 54 vs 60), have cervical cancer (10% vs 4%; p=0.008), be privately insured (71% vs 57%; p=0.003) or have Medicaid (7% vs 3%; p=0.03), or be unemployed (18% vs 3%; p=<0.001), and less likely to be white (79% vs 90%, p=0.003) than those with low financial toxicity. Patients with Medicare were less likely to experience financial toxicity than privately insured patients (RR=0.59, 95% CI 0.37 to 0.95).ConclusionIn this study of patients with gynecologic cancer or pre-cancer, 44% had financial toxicity. Financial toxicity was higher in patients who were younger, did not identify as White, and had private insurance. Targeted measures to address financial toxicity are needed to minimize disparities in patient burden of cancer treatment.

Funder

Foundation for Women’s Cancer

Publisher

BMJ

Reference18 articles.

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