Financial Difficulty Over Time in Young Adults With Breast Cancer
Menée aux Etats-Unis à partir de données portant sur 1 008 jeunes adultes atteintes d'un cancer du sein de stade 0 à III traité entre 2006 et 2016 (âge médian au diagnostic : 36 ans), cette étude de cohorte analyse l'évolution de leurs difficultés financières jusqu'à 10 ans après le diagnostic
Résumé en anglais
IMPORTANCE : Young adults aged 18 to 39 years represent the minority of breast cancer diagnoses but are particularly vulnerable to financial hardship. Factors contributing to sustained financial hardship are unknown.
OBJECTIVES: To identify financial hardship patterns over time and characterize factors associated with discrete trajectories; it was hypothesized that treatment-related arm morbidity, a key source of expense, would be associated with long-term financial difficulty.
DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS : This cohort study included US young adults aged 40 years or younger treated between 2006 and 2016. Eligible patients were treated for stage 0 to stage III breast cancer at institutions participating in the Young Women’s Breast Cancer Study, which included a specialized cancer institute and 12 other academic and community hospitals. Patients who responded at baseline and returned a 1-year survey were included in analysis. Data were analyzed in March 2024.
MAIN OUTCOMES AND MEASURES: Trajectory modeling classified patterns of financial difficulty from baseline through 10 years postdiagnosis using the Cancer Rehabilitation Evaluation System (CARES) scale. Multinomial regression examined characteristics, including treatment-related arm morbidity, associated with each trajectory.
RESULTS : A total 1008 patients were included (median [IQR] age at diagnosis, 36 [33-39] years; 60 Asian [6.0%], 35 Black [3.5%], 47 Hispanic [4.7%], 884 White [87.7%]); 840 patients were college graduates (83.3%), 764 were partnered at baseline (75.8%), 649 were nulliparous (64.4%), and 908 were without comorbidities at enrollment (90.1%). Patients’ tumors were primarily stage I-II (778 [77.2%]), estrogen receptor/progesterone receptor–positive (754 [74.8%]), and ERBB2-negative (formerly HER2) (686 [68.1%]). Patients were more frequently treated with mastectomy than breast conservation (771 [76.5%] vs 297 [29.5%]; P < .001). A majority of patients received radiation therapy (627 [62.2%]), chemotherapy (760 [75.4%]), and endocrine therapy (610 [60.6%]). A total of 727 patients (72.1%) reported arm symptoms within 2 years of surgery. Three distinct trajectories of experiences with finances emerged: 551 patients (54.7%) had low financial difficulty (trajectory 1), 293 (29.1%) had mild difficulty that improved (trajectory 2), and 164 (16.3%) had moderate to severe difficulty peaking several years after diagnosis before improving (trajectory 3). Hispanic ethnicity (OR, 3.71; 95% CI, 1.47-9.36), unemployment at baseline and 1 year (OR, 2.66; 95% CI, 1.63-4.33), and arm symptoms (OR, 1.77; 95% CI, 1.06-2.96) were associated with increased odds of experiencing trajectory 3. Having a college degree (OR, 0.20; 95% CI, 0.12-0.34) or being partnered (OR, 0.24; 95% CI, 0.15-0.38) were associated with increased odds of experiencing trajectory 1.
CONCLUSION : In this cohort study of young adults with breast cancer, we identified a subset of patients who experienced a high degree of financial difficulty persisting into early survivorship. Targeted interventions to mitigate financial toxicity—modifiable factors that include support for the employability or return to work support for those experiencing arm symptoms after treatment—are needed.