Adverse Effects of
Chemotherapy May Be Under-Reported
Behind the Cancer Headlines®
Young breast cancer patients who receive chemotherapy may have a higher number of serious side effects than reported in clinical trials. According to a new study in the Journal of the National Cancer Institute, they may also have higher health care expenditures than previously estimated.
Drug-related side effects account for an estimated 6.5% of
all hospitalizations in the
Michael J. Hassett, M.D., of the
Dana-Farber Cancer Institute in
The authors observed that women who received chemotherapy were more likely to be hospitalized for side effects than those who did not. Chemotherapy recipients, on average, incurred $1,271 more per year in costs for medical expenses related to side effects and $17,617 more per year in costs for ambulatory care than women who did not receive chemotherapy.
The authors write, "Our results suggest that breast cancer chemotherapy may cause more patient suffering and higher health care costs than previously estimated. […] Health care providers must carefully decide whether trial results can be applied to routine clinical practice."
In an accompanying editorial, John K. Erban, M.D., and Joseph Lau, M.D., of Tufts New England Medical Center and Tufts University School of Medicine in Boston, suggest that the study's methodology may have excluded under-represented populations and racial and ethnic minorities but note that the results are "important and intriguing." They write, "As new drugs of increasing efficacy and few acute toxicities emerge, the tendency will be to push them to market, and there will be few incentives for longer term toxicity studies. […] Without careful long term tracking of late adverse effects, there is a risk that very important toxicity events will occur unnoticed."
SOURCE:
Journal of the
National Cancer Institute,