Medicaid Expansion Linked to Decrease in Racial Disparities for GI Cancers

May 29, 2023
Medicaid expansion associated with decrease in mortality for patients with GI cancers in expansion states, and an even greater reduction in mortality for Black patients in expansion states than for those in non-expansion states

Two-year mortality and racial disparities in survival among patients with gastrointestinal (GI) cancers decreased in the time following Medicaid expansion in 2014, according to research presented at the 2023 American Society of Clinical Oncology (ASCO) annual meeting.

Overall, Medicaid expansion was associated with a decrease in 2-year mortality for patients with GI cancers in expansion states, and an even greater reduction in mortality for Black patients residing in expansion states than for those in non-expansion states, the researchers found. In the study, existing racial disparities in mortality remained the same or worsened in non-expansion states but were reduced in expansion states. An increase in treatment (surgery or chemotherapy) was also seen.

“Our study provides compelling data that show Medicaid expansion was associated with improvement in survival for both Black and White patients with gastrointestinal cancers. Additionally, it suggests that Medicaid expansion is one potential avenue to mitigate existing racial survival disparities among these patients,” said Naveen Manisundaram, M.D., a research fellow at The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center, in a statement.

Using a difference-in-difference (DID) analysis, researchers compared the changes in 2-year mortality for Black and White patients in the time periods before Medicaid expansion (2009-13) and after expansion (2014-19) in expansion and non-expansion states. The 2-year mortality rate was adjusted for age, sex, income level, insurance status, area of residence, comorbidity index (an estimate of the risk of death from comorbid disease), and treating facility type.

Following expansion, there was a greater absolute reduction in 2-year mortality among Black patients with pancreatic cancer in expansion states (-11.8 percent) compared to non-expansion states (-2.4 percent) (DID -9.4 percent). In addition, in expansion states there was a greater absolute increase of treatment with chemotherapy in patients with stage 3-4 pancreatic cancer (4.5 percent for Black patients and 3.2 percent for White) compared to non-expansion states (0.8 percent for Black patients and 0.4 percent for White), (DID 3.7 percent for Black patients and DID 2.7 percent for White).

In expansion states, there was a greater absolute decrease in 2-year mortality post-expansion for patients with colorectal cancer (-4.9 percent for Black patients and -6 percent for White) compared to non-expansion states (-2 percent for Black patients and -1.8 percent for White), (DID –2.9 percent for Black patients and –4.2 percent for White). Among Black patients with stage 4 colorectal cancer, there was a net increase in rates of surgery in expansion states compared to non-expansion states (DID 5.7 percent), but not in treatment with chemotherapy (DID 1 percent, p = 0.66).

Among Black patients with stomach cancer in expansion states, post-expansion there was a greater absolute decrease in mortality in expansion states (-13 percent) compared to non-expansion states (-5.2 percent) (DID -7.7 percent, p = 0.07) and an absolute increase in treatment with chemotherapy among those with stage 4 stomach cancer in expansion states (8.6 percent) compared to an absolute decrease in non-expansion states (-2.4 percent) (DID 11 percent, p = 0.06), however, these findings were not statistically significant.

The study included 86,052 patients from the National Cancer Database between 2009-2019 with pancreatic, colorectal, or stomach cancer. This year in the United States, an estimated 241,610 adults will be diagnosed with at least one of these cancers, and an estimated 113,470 deaths from them will occur.

Researchers plan to look at other types of cancers and analyze whether Medicaid Expansion had a similar effect on survival or cancer treatment.

This study was funded by the National Institutes of Health.

“Everyone, everywhere should have access to the best possible care, yet, in the United States, people in minority populations continue to experience disparities in cancer treatment and survival," said Julie R. Gralow, M.D., chief medical officer and executive vice president of ASCO, in a statement. "The findings of this study provide a solid step for closing the gap, showing that the Medicaid expansion opportunity offered by the Affordable Care Act, which allows participating states to improve healthcare access for disadvantaged populations, results in better cancer outcomes and mitigation of racial disparities in cancer survival,”

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