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PURPOSE Many patients with cancer do not gain Medicaid coverage until a cancer diagnosis, which can reduce access to early cancer detection and timely treatment, potentially driving inferior survival. Little is known about whether continuous Medicaid coverage prediagnosis through postdiagnosis ( v gaining Medicaid at/after diagnosis) provides survival benefits for pediatric/adolescent oncology patients. MATERIALS AND METHODS We identified patients newly diagnosed with cancer at age 21 years or younger in a large pediatric health system between 2007 and 2016. Electronic medical records (EMRs) were linked to Medicaid administrative data to differentiate insurance continuity patterns during the 6 months preceding through the 6 months after cancer diagnosis (assessment window): continuous Medicaid, newly gained Medicaid (at or after diagnosis), and other Medicaid enrollment patterns. For patients not linked to Medicaid data, we used EMR-reported insurance types at diagnosis. We followed patients from 6 months postdiagnosis up to 5 years, death, or December 2020, whichever came first. Multivariable regressions estimated all-cause and cancer-specific survival, controlling for sociodemographic and cancer-related factors. RESULTS Among 1,800 patients included in the analysis, 1,293 (71.8%) had some Medicaid enrollment during the assessment window; among them, 47.6% had continuous Medicaid and 36.3% had newly gained Medicaid. Patients not linked with Medicaid data had private (26.9%) or other/no insurance (1.2%) at diagnosis. Compared with patients with continuous Medicaid, those with newly gained Medicaid had higher risks of all-cause death (hazard ratio HR, 1.41 95% CI, 1.10 to 1.81; P = .008) and cancer-specific death (HR, 1.46 95% CI, 1.12 to 1.90; P = .005). CONCLUSION Continuous Medicaid coverage throughout cancer diagnosis is associated with survival benefits for pediatric/adolescent patients. This finding has critical implications as millions of American individuals have been losing coverage since the unwinding of the Medicaid Continuous Enrollment Provision.
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Xin Hu
Sharon M. Castellino
Anne C. Kirchhoff
JCO Oncology Practice
Emory University
University of Utah
Huntsman Cancer Institute
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Hu et al. (Mon,) studied this question.
www.synapsesocial.com/papers/68e56f6bb6db64358750fb02 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1200/op.24.00268
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