Abstract

Background: Melanoma is a rare but serious skin cancer that is responsible for >90% of skin cancer-related deaths. This retrospective data analysis quantifies the direct cost of medical care by disease stage at diagnosis for patients with metastatic melanoma. Methods: The Surveillance, Epidemiology, and End Results (SEER)-Medicare database was queried for patients diagnosed between 2004-2009 with stage IIIB/C and stage IV (M1a, M1b, M1c) melanoma. The primary outcome was overall medical utilization and associated costs from diagnosis to death, the end of Medicare enrolment, or 12/31/2010. Results are stratified by disease stage at diagnosis and presented as per-patient per-month (PPPM) costs. Results: Of the 1263 patients meeting the study criteria (mean age: 75 years; 64% male, 92% white, mean duration of follow up: 37.5 months), 66.6% were diagnosed at stage IIIB/C and 33.4% at stage IV. Cost of care increased with disease stage. Total PPPM costs ranged from $1966 for patients diagnosed with stage IIIB to $4585 among patients diagnosed with stage M1c. Outpatient costs accounted 48.9% of total medical costs among stage IIIB patients, and 38.7% of total medical costs for stage M1c patients. Inpatient costs accounted for 37.1% (stage M1b) - 40.9% (stage M1c) of total medical costs. Conclusions: Healthcare costs for treating patients with metastatic melanoma increase by disease stage. The cost of care was more than double among patients with late stage compared to those with early stage. Treatments demonstrating ability to prevent disease progression from early stage to late stage may confer an economic benefit among other clinical advantages.

Highlights

  • Melanoma is a rare but serious skin cancer that can rapidly infiltrate deep, vascular skin layers, and it commonly metastasizes very early [1] [2]

  • Total per-patient per-month (PPPM) costs ranged from $1966 for patients diagnosed with stage IIIB to $4585 among patients diagnosed with stage M1c

  • Treatments demonstrating ability to prevent disease progression from early stage to late stage may confer an economic benefit among other clinical advantages

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Summary

Introduction

Melanoma is a rare but serious skin cancer that can rapidly infiltrate deep, vascular skin layers, and it commonly metastasizes very early [1] [2]. In a study of patients with metastatic melanoma from the Surveillance, Epidemiology, and End Results (SEER) database, patients with unresectable (no curative resection was performed) non visceral disease (stages IIIB or IIIC or M1a) had a median overall survival (OS) of 22 to 24 months [5]. A systematic review by Guy and colleagues found that medical costs were higher among patients diagnosed with late-stage melanoma compared to those diagnosed at early-stage disease [6]. These studies either used very old data (e.g., SEER-Medicare 1991-1996 and 1999-2003), were based on very small sample sizes, or conducted outside the US. Stage of disease was based on the American Joint Committee on Cancer (AJCC) 6th edition staging system [7]

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