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Cancer Patients Struggle as Drug Costs Soar: Study
Cancer Patients Struggle as Drug Costs Soar: Study TUESDAY, June 7 (HealthDay News) --
Increasing out-of-pocket expenses forces
many cancer patients in the United States to
forgo drugs and doctor appointments and
to cut back on food and other necessities, a
new study reveals.
The researchers looked at 216 cancer
patients who sought help from the national
nonprofit HealthWell Foundation, which
helps underinsured patients afford
expensive medications. All but one patient
had insurance, two-thirds were covered by
Medicare and 83 percent had prescription
drug coverage. Most of the patients were
women (88 percent) with breast cancer (76
percent).
The patients' out-of-pocket expenses
averaged $712 a month for things such as
prescription drugs, doctor visit copays, lost
wages and travel to medical appointments.
These expenses were a significant problem
for 30 percent of the patients and a
catastrophic problem for 11 percent,
according to the researchers at Duke
University Medical Center and the Dana-
Farber Cancer Institute.
The study didn't examine whether patients
suffered worse outcomes because of
treatment choices they were forced to make
due to financial problems. However, the
researchers did find that patients took fewer
medications due to costs and were less
satisfied with their care when out-of-pocket
expenses caused hardship.
The data and conclusions of this study,
which was scheduled for presentation
Monday at the annual meeting of the
American Society of Clinical Oncology in
Chicago, should be viewed as preliminary
until published in a peer-reviewed journal.
"Overall, this study provides a patient-
centered view of a reality of modern day
cancer care -- something that we call
'financial toxicity,'" senior author Dr. Amy
Abernethy, an associate professor in Duke's
medical oncology division, said in a Duke
news release.
"We used to think about chemotherapy
toxicity in terms of bad side effects like
vomiting, nerve pain, confusion and risk of
fatal infection. Now we are starting to think
in terms of how treatment choices impact
real aspects of daily living such as the ability
to buy groceries or not," she added.
Cancer Patients Struggle as Drug Costs Soar: Study
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