Abstract

Prostate cancer imaging rates appear to vary by health care setting. With the recent extension of the Veterans Access, Choice, and Accountability Act, the government has provided funds for veterans to seek care outside the Veterans Health Administration (VA). It is important to understand the difference in imaging rates and subsequent differences in patterns of care in the VA vs a traditional fee-for-service setting such as Medicare. To assess the association between prostate cancer imaging rates and a VA vs fee-for-service health care setting. This cohort study included data for men who received a diagnosis of prostate cancer from January 1, 2004, through March 31, 2008, that were collected from the VA Central Cancer Registry, linked to administrate claims and Medicare utilization records, and the Surveillance, Epidemiology, and End Results Program database. Three distinct nationally representative cohorts were constructed (use of VA only, use of Medicare only, and dual use of VA and Medicare). Men older than 85 years at diagnosis and men without high-risk features but missing any tumor risk characteristic (prostate-specific antigen, Gleason grade, or clinical stage) were excluded. Analysis of the data was completed from March 2016 to February 2018. Patient utilization of different health care delivery systems. Rates of prostate cancer imaging were analyzed by health care setting (Medicare only, VA and Medicare, and VA only) among patients with low-risk prostate cancer and patients with high-risk prostate cancer. Of 98 867 men with prostate cancer (77.4% white; mean [SD] age, 70.26 [7.48] years) in the study cohort, 57.3% were in the Medicare-only group, 14.5% in the VA and Medicare group, and 28.1% in the VA-only group. Among men with low-risk prostate cancer, the Medicare-only group had the highest rate of guideline-discordant imaging (52.5%), followed by the VA and Medicare group (50.9%) and the VA-only group (45.9%) (P < .001). Imaging rates for men with high-risk prostate cancer were not significantly different among the 3 groups. Multivariable analysis showed that individuals in the VA and Medicare group (risk ratio [RR], 0.87; 95% CI, 0.76-0.98) and VA-only group (RR, 0.79; 95% CI, 0.67-0.92) were less likely to receive guideline-discordant imaging than those in the Medicare-only group. The results of this study suggest that patients with prostate cancer who use Medicare rather than the VA for health care could experience more utilization of health care services without an improvement in the quality of care.

Highlights

  • Reducing guideline-discordant prostate cancer staging imaging is an important national priority

  • Multivariable analysis showed that individuals in the Veterans Health Administration (VA) and Medicare group and VA-only group (RR, 0.79; 95% CI, 0.67-0.92) were less likely to receive guideline-discordant imaging than those in the Medicare-only group

  • The VA and Medicare health systems differ in notable ways, including their patient demographics and institutional characteristics,[27,28,29] but it is possible that the differing financial incentives for physicians between these 2 health care delivery systems contributed to significantly different risks of guideline-concordant imaging among men with low-risk cancer

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Summary

Introduction

Reducing guideline-discordant prostate cancer staging imaging is an important national priority. Earlier research found higher rates of guideline-discordant prostate cancer imaging among VA patients with low-risk prostate cancer who used Medicare services than among those with no Medicare utilization.[5] Within the VA, physicians typically receive a set salary that does not include financial incentives to provide more health care services.[6] Outside the VA, the fee-for-service model used in Medicare and in most health care systems in the United States may encourage provision of more health care services[7] because of direct physician reimbursement[8,9] and patient self-referral.

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