4.7 Article

Unmet Need for Clinician Engagement Regarding Financial Toxicity After Diagnosis of Breast Cancer

Journal

CANCER
Volume 124, Issue 18, Pages 3668-3676

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/cncr.31532

Keywords

breast cancer; cost; finances; financial toxicity; patient-provider communication

Categories

Funding

  1. National Cancer Institute (NCI) [P01CA163233]
  2. University of Michigan Cancer Center Biostatistics, Analytics and Bioinformatics shared resource [P30CA46592]
  3. California Department of Public Health [103885]
  4. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention's (CDC) National Program of Cancer Registries [5NU58DP003862-04/DP003862]
  5. NCI's Surveillance, Epidemiology, and End Results program [HHSN261201000140C, HHSN261201000035C, HHSN261201000034C]
  6. NCI [HHSN261201300015I, HHSN26100006]
  7. CDC [5NU58DP003875-04-00]
  8. NATIONAL CANCER INSTITUTE [P30CA046592, P01CA163233] Funding Source: NIH RePORTER

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BACKGROUND: Little is known regarding whether growing awareness of the financial toxicity of a cancer diagnosis and its treatment has increased clinician engagement or changed the needs of current patients. METHODS The authors surveyed patients with early-stage breast cancer who were identified through population-based sampling from 2 Surveillance, Epidemiology, and End Results (SEER) regions and their physicians. The authors described responses from approximately 73% of surgeons (370 surgeons), 61% of medical oncologists (306 medical oncologists), 67% of radiation oncologists (169 radiation oncologists), and 68% of patients (2502 patients).RESULTS: Approximately one-half (50.9%) of responding medical oncologists reported that someone in their practice often or always discusses financial burden with patients, as did 15.6% of surgeons and 43.2% of radiation oncologists. Patients indicated that financial toxicity remains common: 21.5% of white patients and 22.5% of Asian patients had to cut down spending on food, as did 45.2% of black and 35.8% of Latina patients. Many patients desired to talk to providers about the financial impact of cancer (15.2% of whites, 31.1% of blacks, 30.3% of Latinas, and 25.4% of Asians). Unmet patient needs for engagement with physicians about financial concerns were common. Of 945 women who worried about finances, 679 (72.8%) indicated that physicians and their staff did not help. Of 523 women who desired to talk to providers regarding the impact of breast cancer on employment or finances, 283 (55.4%) reported no relevant discussion.CONCLUSIONS: Many patients report inadequate clinician engagement in the management of financial toxicity, even though many providers believe that they make services available. Clinician assessment and communication regarding financial toxicity must improve; cure at the cost of financial ruin is unacceptable. Cancer 2018;000:000-000. (C) 2018 American Cancer Society.

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