Catastrophic health expenditures, insurance churn, and non-employment among women with breast cancer

JNCI Cancer Spectr. 2024 Feb 29;8(2):pkae006. doi: 10.1093/jncics/pkae006.

Abstract

Background: Breast cancer treatment and survivorship entails a complex and expensive continuum of subspecialty care. Our objectives were to assess catastrophic health expenditures, insurance churn, and non-employment among women younger than 65 years who reported a diagnosis of breast cancer. We also evaluated changes in these outcomes related to implementation of the Affordable Care Act.

Methods: The data source for this study was the Medical Expenditure Panel Survey (2005-2019), which is a national annual cross-sectional survey of families, providers, and insurers in the United States. To assess the impact of breast cancer, comparisons were made with a matched cohort of women without cancer. We estimated predicted marginal probabilities to quantify the effects of covariates in models for catastrophic health expenditures, insurance churn, and non-employment.

Results: We identified 1490 respondents younger than 65 years who received care related to breast cancer during the study period, representing a weight-adjusted annual mean of 1 062 129 patients. Approximately 31.8% of women with breast cancer reported health expenditures in excess of 10% of their annual income. In models, the proportion of women with breast cancer who experienced catastrophic health expenditures and non-employment was inversely related to increasing income. During Affordable Care Act implementation, mean number of months of uninsurance decreased and expenditures increased among breast cancer patients.

Conclusions: Our study underscores the impact of breast cancer on financial security and opportunities for patients and their families. A multilevel understanding of these issues is needed to design effective and equitable strategies to improve quality of life and survivorship.

MeSH terms

  • Breast Neoplasms* / epidemiology
  • Breast Neoplasms* / therapy
  • Cross-Sectional Studies
  • Female
  • Health Expenditures*
  • Humans
  • Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act
  • Quality of Life
  • United States / epidemiology