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Pandemic slowed cancer diagnoses, but late-stage cancers came back with a vengeance
STAT News ^ | August 4, 2023 | Samar Bijaj

Posted on 08/05/2023 5:39:27 AM PDT by DoodleBob

Early-stage cancer diagnoses decreased by nearly 20% in the first year of the Covid-19 pandemic. A new study published in Lancet Oncology emphasizes how, because of disruptions in care, patients were more likely to get diagnosed with deadly metastatic disease — across nearly all cancer types.

This study is the most comprehensive analysis of cancer diagnoses during the pandemic, using a nationwide registry that captures over 70% of all cancers in the United States. The starkest decline was observed after the initial shutdowns, with the regular 70,000 monthly cancer diagnoses (captured by the study’s inclusion criteria) being cut in half in April 2020.

While some cancers can be detected by screening — such as lung, breast, colon, and cervical — others require access to primary care, timely referral to specialists, and diagnostic tests. In the early months of the pandemic, however, much of this went silent, according to Hannah Hazard-Jenkins, director of the West Virginia University Cancer Institute, who was not involved with this study. “We ended up shutting down everything that was ‘elective’ in anticipation of a large volume of patients with Covid.”

Hazard-Jenkins described how WVU began to reopen in June 2020. But that didn’t mean patients were comfortable enough to return. “Which is worse: dealing with the potential of getting Covid-19 with such a high fatality rate versus dealing with a concern for a cancer diagnosis?” asked Hazard-Jenkins. “That was a real struggle for patients.”

Xuesong Han, the lead author of this study and scientific director of health services research at the American Cancer Society, said that monthly cancer diagnoses returned to a “near pre-pandemic level” in June 2020, hovering at around 60,000 monthly cases for the remainder of the year. “Has it returned to pre-pandemic level now?” she asked. “We cannot tell as the data are not available yet.”

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What Han’s data did clearly show is that stage 4 cancer diagnoses were 7% more likely in 2020 and that communities of color were particularly hard hit, suggesting significant long-term consequences. Indeed, with nearly 2 million new cancer diagnoses each year, these diagnostic delays could lead to tens of thousands of additional patient deaths and tens of millions of dollars in added health care costs.

Lung cancer, for instance, is responsible for about 1 in 5 of all U.S. cancer deaths, killing more people than breast, colon, and prostate cancer combined. If caught in its early stages, the five-year survival rate is 56%; in its late stages, that number drops to just 5%. Similarly, while stage 1 lung cancer costs a median $25,000 to treat, stage 4 lung cancer costs almost ten times as much at $210,000.

As a breast cancer surgeon, Hazard-Jenkins described seeing patients in late 2020, who knew they had a lump since April but “didn’t do anything because of their fear.” What would have normally been treated by a simple lumpectomy “had to be forced into mastectomy.” Patients who would otherwise receive curative treatment were now getting palliative care because their tumors had metastasized beyond relief.

And these trends have been continuing beyond 2020. “In the breast cancer world, last year we had a profound amount of advanced disease,” said Hazard-Jenkins. “It was numbers of advanced disease I haven’t seen in 15-plus years.”

The study found that marginalized populations were particularly impacted by these late-stage cancers, with Hispanic Americans and Asian Americans and Pacific Islanders being 10%-11% more likely to receive a stage 4 diagnosis in 2020.

Han explained that these racial and ethnic disparities could possibly be explained by cultural and language barriers, low trust in the health care system, and financial shocks due to losing employment. But she particularly emphasized that racial discrimination intensified during the pandemic and could potentially explain why these groups delayed or skipped care. Indeed, during the first year of the pandemic, 1 in 6 Hispanic individuals and 1 in 5 East and Southeast Asian Americans reported facing racial discrimination.

Patients living in socioeconomically deprived areas, largely represented by rural, Indigenous, and historically redlined communities, were similarly 11% more likely to receive a stage 4 cancer diagnosis. “When you’re talking about low health literacy coupled with low financial resources coupled with geographic challenges, it can be very difficult to seek health care,” said Hazard-Jenkins.

Both Han and Hazard-Jenkins thus underscored that, to address these disparities and the impact of delayed cancer diagnoses, the health care system should do a better job of meeting people where they are. “Efforts can be made to continue some silver linings from the pandemic,” said Han, such as “wide adoption of telemedicine and increased use of home-based stool testing for colorectal cancer screening.”

Hazard-Jenkins also described mobile screening programs as another way to engage underserved communities. Since 2009, WVU has been running Bonnie’s Bus for early breast cancer detection and, since 2021, the LUCAS tractor-trailer for lung cancer, with both units driving to the most rural communities in West Virginia to get patients screened. With decade-long partnerships with local providers and federally qualified health centers, Bonnie’s Bus and LUCAS screened a combined 3,750 patients across the state in 2022, regardless of their ability to pay. “When you have economically challenged communities, socially challenged communities and us as big health systems, having this expectation of people coming to you is really just naive,” said Hazard-Jenkins.

It takes similarly creative strategies to ameliorate racial and ethnic disparities, said Priti Bandi, a scientific director at the American Cancer Society. She noted that, while evidence is generally limited, community-based interventions have previously helped improve screening rates among Asian Americans and Pacific Islanders and Hispanic Americans, with lay health workers educating patients in their homes, churches, and grocery stores.

Beyond addressing disparities through greater awareness, the health care system must focus on transportation issues, child care needs, and helping patients navigate through a complex health care system, according to Anne Hubbard, who is the director of health policy at American Society for Radiation Oncology and was not involved in this study. While the health care system doesn’t currently value these wraparound services, she said there are promising trends, such as the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services proposing payment for social determinants of health in the latest version of the physician fee schedule.

Absent these and other reforms to increase access to care, “we’re going to continue to see disproportionate numbers of disadvantaged patient populations who are presenting with more advanced stage disease,” said Hubbard.

Ultimately, Han is optimistic that, with return-to-screening campaigns getting the word out and routine doctor visits going back to normal, patients will increasingly have their cancers caught early and have better outcomes. But she also emphasized that challenges remain, such as nearly 4 million losing Medicaid insurance since pandemic-era protections expired in March.

“Disparities in care access and health outcomes have not been specific to cancer,” Han said. “Improving broader socioeconomic infrastructure for medically underserved communities is required.”


TOPICS:
KEYWORDS: cancer; covid1984
With covid, Dem state governors successfully scared and locked down the populace. In the process, they killed the elderly with impunity, sped-up the cancer-based deaths of the middle-aged populations, and fomented a race war that further calcified Tuskegee-like concerns.

And now scum like Randi Weingarten are revising history and saying they were against lockdowns?

Small wonder that high school boys are becoming more conservative.

1 posted on 08/05/2023 5:39:28 AM PDT by DoodleBob
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To: DoodleBob

I think there is evidence that the vaccine boosted cancer cells inside people. Cancer came back in some people who had beaten it years before. But I bet the scientists don’t want to pursue this.


2 posted on 08/05/2023 5:42:19 AM PDT by ClearCase_guy (It's not a government. It's a criminal enterprise. Fear it, but do not respect it.)
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To: ClearCase_guy
I think there is evidence that the vaccine boosted cancer cells inside people. Cancer came back in some people who had beaten it years before. But I bet the scientists don’t want to pursue this.

Bingo. We also have an epidemic of no autopsies on "died suddenly" cases.

3 posted on 08/05/2023 5:44:14 AM PDT by BipolarBob (I shot a man in Reno (with a paint gun) just to watch him dye.)
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To: DoodleBob

Another win!

Two weeks…


4 posted on 08/05/2023 5:47:21 AM PDT by EEGator
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To: ClearCase_guy

I saw this happen to more than a few people I knew. It happened quickly— they got boosters and within months old, remissioned cancers cane vack at stage 4/metasized and they were dead within in months.


5 posted on 08/05/2023 5:51:03 AM PDT by vivenne
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To: DoodleBob
In Western countries that locked down...the US,Canada,Britain,etc...there were many,many,*many* cancers that weren't diagnosed or treated in a timely fashion. The same goes for heart disease. Add to that the number of suicides due to loss of jobs...and older people who died of broken hearts because their families weren't allowed to visit and you see that the lockdowns were *harmful*...not helpful.

But here in the US the Rat Party knew that the only way to drive Orange Man Bad out of office was to bring the nation's economy to its knees...so with the help of Fauxi and a number of Rat Party Governors that's exactly what they did.

6 posted on 08/05/2023 5:53:11 AM PDT by Gay State Conservative (Two Words: BANANA REPUBLIC!)
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To: ClearCase_guy

My sister in law died of metastatic bone cancer after multiple cancelled appointments due to covid. When they finally saw her and diagnosed it it was far too late.


7 posted on 08/05/2023 5:57:16 AM PDT by desertsolitaire ( )
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To: ClearCase_guy

One of my FiL’s caregivers believes the same. She is in remission breast cancer, holding steady and did not get the shot despite her oncologist begging her to. Her friends with cancer (breast) did get the shot and every single one who was in remission had their cancer return with a vengeance. One died within 6 months of a clear scan. She is really distraught over this and believes it was the shot


8 posted on 08/05/2023 6:01:15 AM PDT by LilFarmer
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To: DoodleBob

The “pandemic” did not cause the racing resurgence of cancer in remission.

The Jab caused it.


9 posted on 08/05/2023 7:09:32 AM PDT by Texas Fossil (Texas is not about where you were born, but a Free State of Heart, Mind and Attitude.)
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To: DoodleBob

Another reason for Covid tribunals, convictions and executions.


10 posted on 08/05/2023 7:18:40 AM PDT by nonliberal (Z.)
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To: DoodleBob

There was no pandemic.

There was a lockdown.


11 posted on 08/05/2023 8:35:27 AM PDT by HIDEK6 (God bless Donald Trump. )
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To: desertsolitaire

Horrible. Sincere condolences for your loss.


12 posted on 08/05/2023 11:09:47 AM PDT by NautiNurse (🇺🇸 Selling out the U.S.A.: The Briben Brand™)
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To: NautiNurse

Thanks. When the world does a thoughtful, honest accounting of the actions taken during Covid and see what was lost, it will be a sad reckoning indeed. But perhaps learning from it will bring healing and wisdom for next time.


13 posted on 08/05/2023 1:44:33 PM PDT by desertsolitaire ( )
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To: DoodleBob

At the risk of sounding hyperbolic, the crimes against humanity that occurred because of “Covid” are immeasurable.


14 posted on 08/05/2023 1:47:59 PM PDT by workerbee (==)
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