Abstract

6544 Background: Early-onset colorectal cancer patients who are Black are less likely to survive than white patients, even for early-stage disease, possibly due to differences in receipt of guideline-concordant care. This study evaluated racial disparities in receipt of timely and guideline-concordant colon and rectal cancer care in a large nationwide sample. Methods: Non-Hispanic Black and white individuals aged 20-49 years newly diagnosed with colorectal cancer during 2004-2019 were selected from the National Cancer Database. Patients who received all care recommended by the National Comprehensive Cancer Network (staging, surgery, lymph node evaluation, chemotherapy, and radiotherapy) for which they were eligible according to cancer subsite and clinical and pathological TNM stage were considered guideline concordant. Demographic characteristics (age and sex), comorbidities, and health insurance coverage type were added sequentially to a series of multivariable models to estimate contribution to racial disparities in receipt of guideline-concordant care. Racial disparities in time from diagnosis date (among rectal cancer patients eligible for neoadjuvant chemotherapy) and surgery date (among colon cancer patients eligible for adjuvant chemotherapy) to date of chemotherapy initiation was evaluated using restricted mean survival time. Results: Of the 84,728 colon and 62,483 rectal cancer patients, 20.8% and 14.5% were Black, respectively. Black patients were less likely to receive guideline concordant care than white patients diagnosed with colon and rectal cancer, respectively (Table). Demographic characteristics and comorbidities combined explained less than 5% of the disparity, while health insurance coverage type explained 28.6% and 19.4% of the disparity among colon and rectal cancer patients, respectively. Restricted mean time to chemotherapy was statistically significantly longer among Black than white patients for colon (54.0 vs 48.7 days, p <.001) and rectal cancers (49.6 vs 40.9 days, p <.001), respectively. Conclusions: Black patients diagnosed with early-onset colorectal cancer receive worse and less timely care than their white counterparts. Differences in health insurance coverage type, a modifiable factor, were the largest identified contributor to the racial disparities in receipt of guideline-concordant care, suggesting that improved access to care could help mitigate disparities in cancer outcomes. [Table: see text]

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