Abstract

82 Background: Palliative care has been underutilized in the setting of advanced cancer despite its established benefit in improving the quality of life in cancer patients. Few studies have evaluated socioeconomic disparities in receiving palliative care in the outpatient oncology setting. We aimed to evaluate for disparities in utilization of palliative care among patients with metastatic solid tumor malignancies at Tennessee Oncology, a large outpatient community oncology practice with an established palliative care program. Methods: We completed a retrospective review of medical records of 1513 patients that were seen in Tennessee Oncology clinics from 12/2020 to 12/2021. We compared the baseline characteristics of patients with metastatic solid tumor malignancies who did and did not receive palliative care. Chi-square and two-sample t-tests were used for data analysis with the 5% significance level using R statistical software. Results: Male patients utilized palliative care less often than female patients (17% versus 24% for females, p =.0002; 95% CI,.05-1.0). Of payer types, Medicare had the least palliative care utilization (14%) compared to commercial (25%) and other payers (23%). Utilization also varied by cancer type, with melanoma (9%), lung cancer (15%) and renal cancer (21%) being least likely to receive palliative care (p <.00005; 95% CI,.19-1.0). We did examine racial differences in palliative care utilization, but those did not reach statistical significance. Conclusions: There are multiple disparities in the utilization of on-site palliative care support services among patients with metastatic solid tumor cancer in this outpatient community oncology setting. Further research is needed to gain insight into why this is, including an in-depth analysis of both patient and provider utilization/referral practices.[Table: see text]

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