2013
DOI: 10.1097/mlr.0b013e3182731277
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When Does an Episode of Care for Cancer Begin?

Abstract: Background Little is known about the medical care resources devoted to diagnosing and treating cancer-related symptoms prior to a definitive cancer diagnosis. Previous research using SEER-Medicare data to measure incremental costs and utilization associated with cancer started with the date of diagnosis. We hypothesized that health care use increases prior to diagnosis of a new primary cancer. Methods We used a longitudinal case-control design to estimate incremental medical care utilization rates. Cases wer… Show more

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Cited by 16 publications
(14 citation statements)
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“…This spike in costs, and the corresponding spike in utilization (Figures ), is consistent with our previous work, which noted a one‐ to threefold increase in monthly utilization of total medical care services during the months leading up to an initial cancer diagnosis (Hornbrook et al. ). De novo patients were younger and in the lung and colorectal cohorts less likely to survive for 12 months after the index diagnosis (Table ) than recurrent patients, but it is not clear that these factors were responsible for the de novo/recurrent cost differential.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 91%
“…This spike in costs, and the corresponding spike in utilization (Figures ), is consistent with our previous work, which noted a one‐ to threefold increase in monthly utilization of total medical care services during the months leading up to an initial cancer diagnosis (Hornbrook et al. ). De novo patients were younger and in the lung and colorectal cohorts less likely to survive for 12 months after the index diagnosis (Table ) than recurrent patients, but it is not clear that these factors were responsible for the de novo/recurrent cost differential.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 91%
“…More than 25% of Medicare dollars are spent at the end of life [40], and cancer consumes a great proportion of overall Medicare expenditures [41], with a 1- to 3-fold increase in monthly health care utilization rates starting from 3 to 5 months before a cancer diagnosis [42]. Mean 5-year net health care costs for Medicare-covered women with colorectal cancer have been estimated as $35,000 [43].…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…All patients had a pre-diagnosis phase, defined as the three months before the date of diagnosis. This phase typically includes diagnostic testing to establish the cancer diagnosis (Christensen et al 2012; Hornbrook et al 2013). We divided the time between diagnosis and death into the following three phases based on clinical relevance and join point analysis (Baker et al 1991; Kim et al 2000; Yabroff et al 2008): (1) initial care, which includes the primary course of therapy and any adjuvant therapy, defined as the six months after diagnosis (including date of diagnosis); (2) continuing care, which encompasses surveillance and active follow-up treatment for cancer recurrence and/or new primary cancer, with costs expressed as annual estimates; and (3) terminal care, which captures intensive services, often palliative in nature, defined as the 12 months before death.…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%