4.0 Article

Bladder Cancer Following Medicaid Expansion: No Changes in the Diagnosis of Muscle -Invasive Disease and Time to Treatment

Journal

BLADDER CANCER
Volume 6, Issue 2, Pages 143-150

Publisher

IOS PRESS
DOI: 10.3233/BLC-200294

Keywords

Urothelial neoplasms; bladder neoplasms; United States; epidemiology; Medicaid expansion

Ask authors/readers for more resources

BACKGROUND: Bladder cancer patients who are insured experience improved outcomes. Medicaid expansion aimed to increase insurance coverage and improve access to care. However, the association between Medicaid expansion and stage at diagnosis or time to treatment for those with advanced bladder cancer is unknown. OBJECTIVE: We sought to determine to association of Medicaid expansion with stage at diagnosis, and time to treatment for patients with muscle-invasive bladder cancer. METHODS: A US-based cancer registry was utilized to evaluate the association between Medicaid expansion and cancer stage at diagnosis, insurance rates, and time to treatment (>60 days from diagnosis) for those diagnosed with bladder cancer. We compared outcomes in non-Medicare-aged patients in non-expansion states (n = 16,602) and expansion states (n = 15,921) before (years 2012-2013) and after (years 2015-2016) Medicaid expansion with adjusted difference-in-differences (DIDs) using multivariable linear regression. RESULTS: The DIDs of percentage of bladder cancer patients with Stage >= II disease (0.02%; 95% confidence interval [CI] -1.91 to 1.95%, p = 0.9), without insurance (-0.65%; 95% CI -1.71 to 0.41), and with metastatic disease at diagnosis (-0.07%; 95% CI -1.14 to 1.00, both p > 0.10) did not change following insurance expansion despite an increase in Medicaid coverage (6.03%; 95% CI 4.79 to 7.29, p < 0.01). Any treatment with either cystectomy, radiation or systemic therapy > 60 days after diagnosis of stage >= II disease did not change (DID 1.48%; 95% CI -3.29 to 6.25%, p = 0.50). On subgroup analysis of patients living in low-income regions, the rates of stage <= II disease, no insurance, metastatic disease, and time to treatment did not significantly change. CONCLUSION: Medicaid expansion was not associated with changes in advanced cancer stage at diagnosis or time to treatment in newly diagnosed bladder cancer patients.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.0
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available