Conference Coverage

Money, Ethnicity, and Access Linked to Cervical Cancer Disparities


 

FROM SGO 2024

Disparities and geographical variations in cervical cancer outcomes appear to be related to social determinants of health, including socioeconomic status, race or ethnicity, and proximity to facilities skilled at early-stage diagnosis and treatment.

These findings come from analyses of insurance data gathered via the Cervical Cancer Geo-Analyzer tool, a publicly available online instrument designed to provide visual representation of recurrent or metastatic cervical cancer burden across metropolitan statistical areas in the United States over multiple years.

[Reporting the findings of] “this study is the first step to optimize healthcare resources allocations, advocate for policy changes that will minimize access barriers, and tailor education for modern treatment options to help reduce and improve outcomes for cervical cancer in US patients,” said Tara Castellano, MD, an author and presenter of this new research, at the Society of Gynecologic Oncology’s Annual Meeting on Women’s Cancer, held in San Diego.

Seeing Cancer Cases

Dr. Castellano and colleagues previously reported that the Geo-Analyzer tool effectively provides quantified evidence of cervical cancer disease burden and graphic representation of geographical variations across the United States for both incident and recurrent/metastatic cervical cancer.

In the current analysis, Dr. Castellano, of Louisiana State University School of Medicine in New Orleans, discussed potential factors related to cervical cancer incidence and geographic variations.

The study builds on previous studies that have shown that Black and Hispanic women have longer time to treatment and worse cervical cancer outcomes than White women.

For example, in a study published in the International Journal of Gynecologic Cancer, Marilyn Huang, MD, and colleagues from the University of Miami Miller School of Medicine, Miami, Florida, and other centers in Miami looked at time to treatment in a diverse population of 274 women starting therapy for cervical cancer.

They found that insurance type (private, public, or none) contributed to delay in treatment initiation regardless of the treatment modality, and that the patient’s language and institution of diagnosis also influenced time to treatment.

In a separate scientific poster presented at SGO 2024, Dr. Castellano and colleagues reported that, among women with newly diagnosed endometrial cancer, the median time to treatment was 7 days longer for both Hispanic and Black women, compared with non-Hispanic White women. In addition, Black women had a 7-day longer time to receiving their first therapy for advanced disease. All of these differences were statistically significant.

Dr. Castellano told this news organization that the time-to-treatment disparities in the endometrial cancer study were determined by diagnostic codes and the timing of insurance claims.

Reasons for the disparities may include more limited access to care and structural and systemic biases in the healthcare systems where the majority of Black and Hispanic patients live, she said.

Insurance Database

In the new study on cervical cancer, Dr. Castellano and her team defined cervical cancer burden as prevalent cervical cancer diagnosis per 100,000 eligible women enrolled in a commercial insurance plan, Medicaid, or Medicare Advantage. Recurrent or metastatic cancer was determined to be the proportion of patients with cervical cancer who initiated systemic therapy.

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