Cargando…

Association of Care at Minority-Serving vs Non–Minority-Serving Hospitals With Use of Palliative Care Among Racial/Ethnic Minorities With Metastatic Cancer in the United States

IMPORTANCE: It is not known whether racial/ethnic differences in receipt of palliative care are attributable to different treatment of minorities or lower utilization of palliative care at the relatively small number of hospitals that treat a large portion of minority patients. OBJECTIVE: To assess...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Cole, Alexander P., Nguyen, David-Dan, Meirkhanov, Akezhan, Golshan, Mehra, Melnitchouk, Nelya, Lipsitz, Stuart R., Kilbridge, Kerry L., Kibel, Adam S., Cooper, Zara, Weissman, Joel, Trinh, Quoc-Dien
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: American Medical Association 2019
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6484582/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30707230
http://dx.doi.org/10.1001/jamanetworkopen.2018.7633
_version_ 1783414140835987456
author Cole, Alexander P.
Nguyen, David-Dan
Meirkhanov, Akezhan
Golshan, Mehra
Melnitchouk, Nelya
Lipsitz, Stuart R.
Kilbridge, Kerry L.
Kibel, Adam S.
Cooper, Zara
Weissman, Joel
Trinh, Quoc-Dien
author_facet Cole, Alexander P.
Nguyen, David-Dan
Meirkhanov, Akezhan
Golshan, Mehra
Melnitchouk, Nelya
Lipsitz, Stuart R.
Kilbridge, Kerry L.
Kibel, Adam S.
Cooper, Zara
Weissman, Joel
Trinh, Quoc-Dien
author_sort Cole, Alexander P.
collection PubMed
description IMPORTANCE: It is not known whether racial/ethnic differences in receipt of palliative care are attributable to different treatment of minorities or lower utilization of palliative care at the relatively small number of hospitals that treat a large portion of minority patients. OBJECTIVE: To assess the association of receipt of palliative care among patients with metastatic cancer with receipt of treatment at minority-serving hospitals (MSHs) vs non-MSHs. DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS: This retrospective cohort study used Participant Use Files of the National Cancer Database, a prospectively maintained, hospital-based cancer registry consisting of all patients treated at more than 1500 US hospitals, to collect data from individuals older than 40 years with metastatic prostate, lung, colon, and breast cancer, diagnosed from January 1, 2004, to December 31, 2015. Data were accessed in October 2017, and the analysis was performed in July 2018. EXPOSURES: Hospitals in the top decile in terms of the proportion of black and Hispanic patients for each cancer type were defined as MSHs. MAIN OUTCOMES AND MEASURES: A multilevel logistic regression model that estimated the odds of palliative care was fit, adjusting for year of diagnosis, sex, race/ethnicity, insurance, income, educational level, and cancer type, with an interaction term between cancer type and MSH status and a hospital-level random intercept to account for unmeasured hospital characteristics. RESULTS: A total of 601 680 individuals (mean [SD] age, 67.4 [11.4] years; 95% CI, 67.2-67.6 years; 314 279 [52.2%] male; 475 039 [78.9%] white) were studied. In total, 130 813 patients (21.7%) received palliative care, ranging from 102 019 (25.4%) with lung cancer to 9966 (11.1%) with colon cancer. In total, 16 435 black individuals (20.0%) and 3551 Hispanic individuals (15.9%) received palliative care vs 106 603 non-Hispanic white individuals (22.5%) (P < .001). The MSH patients were less likely than the non-MSH patients to receive palliative care, regardless of race/ethnicity (12 692 [18.0%] vs 118 121 [22.3%]; P = .002). In an adjusted analysis, treatment at an MSH had a statistically significant association with lower odds of receiving palliative care (odds ratio, 0.67; 95% CI, 0.53-0.84). CONCLUSIONS AND RELEVANCE: Although the factors associated with minority patients’ receipt of palliative care are complex, in this study, treatment at MSHs was associated with significantly lower odds of receiving any palliative care in an adjusted analysis, but black and Hispanic race/ethnicity was not. These findings suggest that the site of care is associated with race/ethnicity-based differences in palliative care.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-6484582
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2019
publisher American Medical Association
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-64845822019-05-21 Association of Care at Minority-Serving vs Non–Minority-Serving Hospitals With Use of Palliative Care Among Racial/Ethnic Minorities With Metastatic Cancer in the United States Cole, Alexander P. Nguyen, David-Dan Meirkhanov, Akezhan Golshan, Mehra Melnitchouk, Nelya Lipsitz, Stuart R. Kilbridge, Kerry L. Kibel, Adam S. Cooper, Zara Weissman, Joel Trinh, Quoc-Dien JAMA Netw Open Original Investigation IMPORTANCE: It is not known whether racial/ethnic differences in receipt of palliative care are attributable to different treatment of minorities or lower utilization of palliative care at the relatively small number of hospitals that treat a large portion of minority patients. OBJECTIVE: To assess the association of receipt of palliative care among patients with metastatic cancer with receipt of treatment at minority-serving hospitals (MSHs) vs non-MSHs. DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS: This retrospective cohort study used Participant Use Files of the National Cancer Database, a prospectively maintained, hospital-based cancer registry consisting of all patients treated at more than 1500 US hospitals, to collect data from individuals older than 40 years with metastatic prostate, lung, colon, and breast cancer, diagnosed from January 1, 2004, to December 31, 2015. Data were accessed in October 2017, and the analysis was performed in July 2018. EXPOSURES: Hospitals in the top decile in terms of the proportion of black and Hispanic patients for each cancer type were defined as MSHs. MAIN OUTCOMES AND MEASURES: A multilevel logistic regression model that estimated the odds of palliative care was fit, adjusting for year of diagnosis, sex, race/ethnicity, insurance, income, educational level, and cancer type, with an interaction term between cancer type and MSH status and a hospital-level random intercept to account for unmeasured hospital characteristics. RESULTS: A total of 601 680 individuals (mean [SD] age, 67.4 [11.4] years; 95% CI, 67.2-67.6 years; 314 279 [52.2%] male; 475 039 [78.9%] white) were studied. In total, 130 813 patients (21.7%) received palliative care, ranging from 102 019 (25.4%) with lung cancer to 9966 (11.1%) with colon cancer. In total, 16 435 black individuals (20.0%) and 3551 Hispanic individuals (15.9%) received palliative care vs 106 603 non-Hispanic white individuals (22.5%) (P < .001). The MSH patients were less likely than the non-MSH patients to receive palliative care, regardless of race/ethnicity (12 692 [18.0%] vs 118 121 [22.3%]; P = .002). In an adjusted analysis, treatment at an MSH had a statistically significant association with lower odds of receiving palliative care (odds ratio, 0.67; 95% CI, 0.53-0.84). CONCLUSIONS AND RELEVANCE: Although the factors associated with minority patients’ receipt of palliative care are complex, in this study, treatment at MSHs was associated with significantly lower odds of receiving any palliative care in an adjusted analysis, but black and Hispanic race/ethnicity was not. These findings suggest that the site of care is associated with race/ethnicity-based differences in palliative care. American Medical Association 2019-02-01 /pmc/articles/PMC6484582/ /pubmed/30707230 http://dx.doi.org/10.1001/jamanetworkopen.2018.7633 Text en Copyright 2019 Cole AP et al. JAMA Network Open. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the CC-BY License.
spellingShingle Original Investigation
Cole, Alexander P.
Nguyen, David-Dan
Meirkhanov, Akezhan
Golshan, Mehra
Melnitchouk, Nelya
Lipsitz, Stuart R.
Kilbridge, Kerry L.
Kibel, Adam S.
Cooper, Zara
Weissman, Joel
Trinh, Quoc-Dien
Association of Care at Minority-Serving vs Non–Minority-Serving Hospitals With Use of Palliative Care Among Racial/Ethnic Minorities With Metastatic Cancer in the United States
title Association of Care at Minority-Serving vs Non–Minority-Serving Hospitals With Use of Palliative Care Among Racial/Ethnic Minorities With Metastatic Cancer in the United States
title_full Association of Care at Minority-Serving vs Non–Minority-Serving Hospitals With Use of Palliative Care Among Racial/Ethnic Minorities With Metastatic Cancer in the United States
title_fullStr Association of Care at Minority-Serving vs Non–Minority-Serving Hospitals With Use of Palliative Care Among Racial/Ethnic Minorities With Metastatic Cancer in the United States
title_full_unstemmed Association of Care at Minority-Serving vs Non–Minority-Serving Hospitals With Use of Palliative Care Among Racial/Ethnic Minorities With Metastatic Cancer in the United States
title_short Association of Care at Minority-Serving vs Non–Minority-Serving Hospitals With Use of Palliative Care Among Racial/Ethnic Minorities With Metastatic Cancer in the United States
title_sort association of care at minority-serving vs non–minority-serving hospitals with use of palliative care among racial/ethnic minorities with metastatic cancer in the united states
topic Original Investigation
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6484582/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30707230
http://dx.doi.org/10.1001/jamanetworkopen.2018.7633
work_keys_str_mv AT colealexanderp associationofcareatminorityservingvsnonminorityservinghospitalswithuseofpalliativecareamongracialethnicminoritieswithmetastaticcancerintheunitedstates
AT nguyendaviddan associationofcareatminorityservingvsnonminorityservinghospitalswithuseofpalliativecareamongracialethnicminoritieswithmetastaticcancerintheunitedstates
AT meirkhanovakezhan associationofcareatminorityservingvsnonminorityservinghospitalswithuseofpalliativecareamongracialethnicminoritieswithmetastaticcancerintheunitedstates
AT golshanmehra associationofcareatminorityservingvsnonminorityservinghospitalswithuseofpalliativecareamongracialethnicminoritieswithmetastaticcancerintheunitedstates
AT melnitchouknelya associationofcareatminorityservingvsnonminorityservinghospitalswithuseofpalliativecareamongracialethnicminoritieswithmetastaticcancerintheunitedstates
AT lipsitzstuartr associationofcareatminorityservingvsnonminorityservinghospitalswithuseofpalliativecareamongracialethnicminoritieswithmetastaticcancerintheunitedstates
AT kilbridgekerryl associationofcareatminorityservingvsnonminorityservinghospitalswithuseofpalliativecareamongracialethnicminoritieswithmetastaticcancerintheunitedstates
AT kibeladams associationofcareatminorityservingvsnonminorityservinghospitalswithuseofpalliativecareamongracialethnicminoritieswithmetastaticcancerintheunitedstates
AT cooperzara associationofcareatminorityservingvsnonminorityservinghospitalswithuseofpalliativecareamongracialethnicminoritieswithmetastaticcancerintheunitedstates
AT weissmanjoel associationofcareatminorityservingvsnonminorityservinghospitalswithuseofpalliativecareamongracialethnicminoritieswithmetastaticcancerintheunitedstates
AT trinhquocdien associationofcareatminorityservingvsnonminorityservinghospitalswithuseofpalliativecareamongracialethnicminoritieswithmetastaticcancerintheunitedstates