Medicaid expansion and racial disparity in timely multidisciplinary treatment in muscle invasive bladder cancer

Author:

Jiang Changchuan1ORCID,Perimbeti Stuthi1,Deng Lei1ORCID,Xing Jiazhang2,Chatta Gurkamal S1,Han Xuesong3ORCID,Gopalakrishnan Dharmesh1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Medicine, Roswell Park Comprehensive Cancer Center , Buffalo, NY, USA

2. Department of Medicine, Peking Union Medical College , Beijing, China

3. Surveillance and Health Equity Science, American Cancer Society , Atlanta, GA, USA

Abstract

Abstract Background Multidisciplinary cancer care (neoadjuvant chemotherapy followed by radical cystectomy or trimodality therapy) is crucial for outcome of muscle-invasive bladder cancer (MIBC), a potentially curable illness. Medicaid expansion through Affordable Care Act (ACA) increased insurance coverage especially among patients of racial minorities. This study aims to investigate the association between Medicaid expansion and racial disparity in timely treatment in MIBC. Methods This quasi-experimental study analyzed Black and White individuals aged 18-64 years with stage II and III bladder cancer treated with neoadjuvant chemotherapy followed by radical cystectomy or trimodality therapy from National Cancer Database 2008-2018. Primary outcome was timely treatment started within 45 days following cancer diagnosis. Racial disparity is the percentage-point difference between Black and White patients. Patients in expansion and nonexpansion states were compared using difference-in-differences and difference-in-difference-in-differences analyses, controlling for age, sex, area-level income, clinical stage, comorbidity, metropolitan status, treatment type, and year of diagnosis. Results The study included 4991 (92.3% White, n = 4605; 7.7% Black, n = 386) patients. Percentage of Black patients who received timely care increased following the ACA in Medicaid expansion states (54.5% pre-ACA vs 57.4% post-ACA) but decreased in nonexpansion states (69.9% pre-ACA vs 53.7% post-ACA). After adjusting covariates, Medicaid expansion was associated with a net 13.7 percentage-point reduction of Black–White patient disparity in timely receipt of MIBC treatment (95% confidence interval = 0.5% to 26.8%; P < .01). Conclusions Medicaid expansion was associated with statically significant reduction in racial disparity between Black and White patients in timely multidisciplinary treatment for MIBC.

Funder

AstraZeneca

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Cancer Research,Oncology

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