Abstract

IntroductionTreatment burden is emerging as an important patient-centered outcome for older adults with cancer who concurrently manage geriatric conditions. Our objective was to evaluate the contribution of geriatric conditions to treatment burden in older adults with non-muscle invasive bladder cancer (NMIBC). MethodsWe identified 73,395 Medicare beneficiaries age 66+ diagnosed with NMIBC (Stage <II) in SEER-Medicare (2001–2014). The primary outcome was treatment burden, defined as health system contact days in the year following NMIBC diagnosis. Explanatory variables were the following geriatric conditions: multimorbidity (≥ 2 chronic conditions), functional dependency, falls, depression, cognitive impairment, weight loss, and urinary incontinence. We used negative binomial regression to model the association between individual geriatric conditions and treatment burden while adjusting for covariates. ResultsAt baseline, 64% had multimorbidity and median 3 conditions (IQR 0–5). Prevalence of other geriatric conditions ranged from 5.9%–15.2%. Adjusted mean health system contact was 8.9 days (95% CI 8.6–9.2). Multimorbidity had the largest effect size (adjusted mean 11.8 contact days (95% CI 8.3–8.8)). Each additional chronic condition conferred a 13% increased average number of health system contact (adjusted IRR 1.132, 95% CI 1.129–1.135). Regardless of number of chronic conditions, rural patients consistently had more treatment burden than urban counterparts. DiscussionIn this population-based cohort of older NMIBC patients, multimorbidity and rurality were strongly associated with treatment burden in the year following NMIBC diagnosis. These findings highlight the need for interventions that reduce treatment burden due to geriatric conditions among the growing population of older adults with cancer, particularly in rural areas.

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