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			 “We found that patients had high out-of-pocket costs related to 
			their breast cancer treatment, particularly those patients who were 
			insured through high deductible health plans,” said lead study 
			author Dr. Sharon Giordano, a researcher at the University of Texas 
			MD Anderson Cancer Center in Houston. 
 “The high costs of care may leave some patients unable to pay their 
			medical bills or afford their potentially life-saving medications,” 
			Giordano added by email.
 
 At least one third of the roughly 250,000 women diagnosed with 
			invasive breast cancer each year in the U.S. receive chemotherapy, 
			and allowing them to choose equally effective but less costly 
			regimens might reduce costs of treating these tumors by $1 billion, 
			Giordano said.
 
 To assess the variation in chemotherapy costs, researchers looked at 
			claims data for almost 15,000 women diagnosed with breast cancer 
			from 2008 to 2012.
 
 All of the women had private medical insurance starting at least six 
			months prior to their diagnosis and continuing for at least 18 
			months afterward.
 
			
			 
			They all received chemotherapy within three months of diagnosis - 
			and they all survived at least a year without any additional tumors.
 Researchers calculated average total costs, including the amounts 
			borne by women and their insurance providers, as well as 
			out-of-pocket costs for all claims within 18 months of diagnosis in 
			2013 dollars.
 
 Costs, and variation, were greatest for chemotherapy regimens built 
			around trastuzumab (Herceptin) a targeted biotech therapy for women 
			with one type of aggressive tumor.
 
 Among patients who didn’t receive trastuzumab, in half the cases 
			women’s insurance plans paid at least $82,260 – but that number 
			ranged from $62,302 to $104,197 depending on the drug regimen.
 
 Without trastuzumab, half the women paid at least $2,727 out of 
			pocket. A quarter of them, however, paid more than $4,712 and 10 
			percent paid more than $7,041 out of pocket, researchers report in 
			the journal Cancer.
 
 When patients did receive trastuzumab-based therapies, insurance 
			paid at least $160,590 in half of cases, but that number varied, 
			too, from $106,369 to $169,567, depending on the drugs.
 
 Among women on trastuzumab, meanwhile, half of them had 
			out-of-pocket costs of at least $3,381, 25 percent paid more than 
			$5,604 and 10 percent paid more than $8,384.
 
 One limitation of the study is its focus on younger women with 
			private health insurance, the authors note. Some patients lacking 
			these benefits may face much higher out-of-pocket costs.
 
			
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			Another shortcoming of the study is that insurance claims can lack 
			data that influences costs, such as tumor characteristics or the 
			stage of cancer at the time of diagnosis. Some newer breast cancer 
			treatments were also not included in the study, the authors point 
			out.
 Still, the findings suggest that women who have concerns about the 
			cost of treatment should ask doctors whether any alternative 
			regimens might carry a lower price tag, said Stacie Dusetzina, a 
			pharmacy researcher at the University of North Carolina at Chapel 
			Hill who wasn’t involved in the study.
 
 “There may be alternative treatments that have lower costs or that 
			your insurer covers more generously,” Dusetzina said by email.
 
			Trastuzumab, however, has no equal when it comes to treating women 
			with the tumors it’s designed to target, making it harder for some 
			women to find more affordable options that offer the same shot at 
			survival, Dusetzina cautioned.
 High-priced chemotherapy isn’t limited to breast cancer regimens, 
			noted Dr. Peter Bach, a health policy researcher at Memorial Sloan 
			Kettering Cancer in New York who wasn’t involved in the study.
 
 “The prices of drugs are rising faster than the improvements they 
			represent, and insurers are putting an even larger burden of those 
			price increases on sick patients,” Bach said by email. “The 
			consequence is that more patients report concerns about not being 
			able to afford their treatment than not being able to tolerate it; 
			multiple analyses now show delays in treatment due to high prices 
			even for super effective treatments.”
 
 SOURCE: http://bit.ly/2dro8Hr Cancer, online October 10, 2016.
 
			[© 2016 Thomson Reuters. All rights 
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