Travel-time barriers to specialized cancer care for adolescents and young adults with acute lymphoblastic leukemia.

IF 3.4 Q2 ONCOLOGY JNCI Cancer Spectrum Pub Date : 2024-07-01 DOI:10.1093/jncics/pkae046
Helen M Parsons, Lori S Muffly, Ariadna Garcia, Amy Zhang, Kate Miller, David Van Riper, Kate Knowles, Theresa H Keegan
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Abstract

Background: Prior studies demonstrate that 20%-50% of adolescents and young adults (age 15-39 years) with acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) receive care at specialty cancer centers, yet a survival benefit has been observed for patients at these sites. Our objective was to identify patients at risk of severe geographic barriers to specialty cancer center-level care.

Methods: We used data from the North American Association of Central Cancer Registries Cancer in North America database to identify adolescent and young adult ALL patients diagnosed between 2004 and 2016 across 43 US states. We calculated driving distance and travel time from counties where participants lived to the closest specialty cancer center sites. We then used multivariable logistic regression models to examine the relationship between sociodemographic characteristics of counties where adolescent and young adult ALL patients resided and the need to travel more than 1 hour to obtain care at a specialty cancer center.

Results: Among 11 813 adolescent and young adult ALL patients, 43.4% were aged 25-39 years, 65.5% were male, 32.9% were Hispanic, and 28.7% had public insurance. We found 23.6% of adolescent and young adult ALL patients from 60.8% of included US counties would be required to travel more than 1 hour one way to access a specialty cancer center. Multivariable models demonstrate that patients living in counties that are nonmetropolitan, with lower levels of educational attainment, with higher income inequality, with lower internet access, located in primary care physician shortage areas, and with fewer hospitals providing chemotherapy services are more likely to travel more than 1 hour to access a specialty cancer center.

Conclusions: Substantial travel-related barriers exist to accessing care at specialty cancer centers across the United States, particularly for patients living in areas with greater concentrations of historically marginalized communities.

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患有急性白血病的青少年接受专门癌症治疗的旅行时间障碍。
背景:先前的研究表明,20%-50%的急性淋巴细胞白血病(ALL)青少年和年轻成人(AYA,15-39 岁)在专科癌症中心(SCC)接受治疗;然而,在这些地方观察到的患者生存率显著提高。我们的目标是确定哪些患者有可能因严重的地理障碍而无法接受 SCC 级别的治疗:我们利用北美中央癌症登记协会(North American Association of Central Cancer Registries)的北美癌症数据库(Cancer in North America)中的数据,识别了 2004-2016 年间在美国 43 个州确诊的青壮年 ALL 患者。我们计算了从参与者居住的县到最近的 SCC 机构的车程和旅行时间。然后,我们使用多变量逻辑回归模型研究了AYA ALL患者所在县的社会人口学特征与前往SCC接受治疗所需时间大于1小时之间的关系:在11813名AYA ALL患者中,43.4%为25-39岁,65.5%为男性,32.9%为西班牙裔,28.7%有公共保险。我们发现,在美国60.8%的县中,有23.6%的AYA ALL患者需要单程旅行1小时以上才能到达SCC。多变量模型表明,生活在非大都市、教育程度较低、收入不平等程度较高、互联网接入较低、位于初级保健医生短缺地区以及提供化疗服务的医院较少的地区的患者更有可能需要旅行超过1小时才能接受SCC治疗:结论:在全美范围内,患者在接受 SCC 治疗时存在大量与旅行相关的障碍,尤其是对于生活在历史上被边缘化社区较为集中的地区的患者而言。
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来源期刊
JNCI Cancer Spectrum
JNCI Cancer Spectrum Medicine-Oncology
CiteScore
7.70
自引率
0.00%
发文量
80
审稿时长
18 weeks
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