Table 4.
Factor | % Increase (+) or Decrease (−) in Total Cost of Care* | 95% CI |
---|---|---|
Receipt of at least one tumor marker test† | ||
No (reference) | ||
Yes | +29.4‡ | +26.6 to +32.2 |
Age (years) | ||
Mean age at diagnosis§ | −1.7‡ | −1.8 to −1.5 |
Year | ||
Diagnosis year§ | +5.4‡ | +4.9 to +5.9 |
Comorbidity | ||
Klabunde Index§ | +55.7‡ | +51.7 to +59.7 |
Race (v white) | ||
African American | −0.1 | −3.1 to +6.2 |
American Indian/Alaskan native | −13.9 | −33.4 to +5.5 |
Asian/Pacific Islander | −23.1‡ | −27.8 to −18.3 |
Hispanic | −6.9‖ | −11.8 to −2.0 |
Other/unknown | −23.7‖ | −35.5 to −12.0 |
Tumor stage (v stage 1) | ||
2 | +18.1‡ | +15.5 to 20.7 |
3 | +64.3‡ | +56.3 to +72.3 |
Estrogen receptor status (v negative) | ||
Positive | −18.4‡ | −21.5 to −15.2 |
Borderline | −4.8 | −28.8 to +19.1 |
Unknown | −9.3 | −22.7 to +4.2 |
Progesterone receptor status (v negative) | ||
Positive | −2.9‖ | −5.7 to −0.0 |
Borderline | +1.6 | −9.8 to +13.1 |
Unknown | −17.9‖ | −29.8 to −6.1 |
Geographic region (v San Francisco) | ||
Connecticut | −2.4 | −8.9 to +4.1 |
Detroit | +15.8‡ | +8.2 to +23.5 |
Hawaii | −12.9‖ | −22.5 to −3.2 |
Iowa | −28.6‡ | −33.7 to −23.6 |
New Mexico | −17.5‡ | −24.9 to −10.3 |
Seattle | −12.1‡ | −17.9 to −6.2 |
Utah | −27.0‡ | −33.1 to −20.9 |
Atlanta | −11.9‖ | −18.7 to −5.2 |
San Jose | +3.6 | −4.9 to +12.0 |
Los Angeles | +1.4 | −5.1 to +7.9 |
Rural Georgia | −10.7 | −29.3 to +7.8 |
Greater California | −7.3‖ | −12.7 to −1.9 |
Kentucky | −27.8‡ | −32.7 to −23.0 |
Louisiana | −15.4‡ | −21.2 to −9.6 |
New Jersey | −4.7 | −10.3 to +0.8 |
Urban/rural status (v large metropolitan area with 1M+ population) | ||
Metropolitan (250,000+) | −2.0 | −4.8 to +0.8 |
Large urban (20,000+) | −3.5 | −8.0 to +0.9 |
Small urban (2,500+) | −7.1‖ | −11.5 to −2.7 |
Rural (< 2,500) | −8.2‖ | −16.1 to −0.3 |
Analyzed using the natural log transformation (70 participants not included because of no costs).
During the 2 years after diagnosis, excluding the 2 months immediately after diagnosis.
P < .001, two-sided t test.
Analyzed as a continuous variable.
P < .05, two-sided t test.