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Cancer's Growing Burden: Rising Cost Of Care

Cancer Cost

By MARILYNN MARCHIONE   02/25/12 12:01 PM ET  AP

-- Patti Tyree was afraid that cancer would steal her future. Instead, the cost of treating it has.

She had hoped to buy a small farm with money inherited from her mother. But copayments for just one $18,000 round of breast chemotherapy and one shot of a nearly $15,000 blood-boosting drug cost her $2,000.

Bills for other treatments are still coming, and almost half of her $25,000 inheritance is gone.

"I supposedly have pretty good insurance," said Tyree, 57, a recently retired federal worker who lives near Roanoke, Va. "How can anybody afford this?"

Forty years after the National Cancer Act launched the "war on cancer," the battle is not just finding cures and better treatments but also being able to afford them.

New drugs often cost $100,000 or more a year. Patients are being put on them sooner in the course of their illness and for a longer time – sometimes for the rest of their lives. The latest trend is to use these drugs in combination, guided by genetic tests that allow more personalized treatment but also add to its expense.

It's not just drugs: Radiation treatment is becoming more high-tech, and each leap in technology has brought a quantum leap in expense. Proton therapy is one example – it costs twice as much as conventional radiation and is attracting prostate cancer patients despite a lack of evidence that it is any better.

The financial strain is showing: Some programs that help people pay their bills have seen a rise in requests, and medical bills are a leading cause of bankruptcies.

"Patients have to pay more for their premiums, more for their copayments, more for their deductibles. It's become harder to afford what we have, and what we have is becoming not only more costly but also complex," said Dr. Michael Hassett, a cancer specialist and policy researcher at Dana-Farber Cancer Institute in Boston.

Insurers also are being squeezed by laws that require coverage and restrict raising premiums. And the burden is growing on Medicare, which in some cases is paying for treatments and tests that have not been shown to benefit patients.

Why have costs escalated so much?

To some extent, it's the price of success.

Cancer deaths have been declining in the United States since the early 1990s. Two out of 3 people now live at least five years after a cancer diagnosis, up from 1 out of 2 in the 1970s, according to the American Society of Clinical Oncology, doctors who treat the disease. Nine out of 10 women with early-stage breast cancer are alive five years after their diagnosis and are probably cured.

Modern treatments have fewer side effects and allow patients to have a greater quality of life than chemotherapy did in the past. But they are far more toxic financially.

Of the nation's 10 most expensive medical conditions, cancer has the highest per-person price. The total cost of treating cancer in the U.S. rose from about $95.5 billion in 2000 to $124.6 billion in 2010, the National Cancer Institute estimates. The true tab is higher – the agency bases its estimates on average costs from 2001-2006, before many expensive treatments came out.

Cancer costs are projected to reach $158 billion, in 2010 dollars, by the year 2020, because of a growing population of older people who are more likely to develop cancer.

That's the societal cost. For individual patients, costs can vary widely even for the same drug. Dr. Bruce Roth, a cancer specialist at Washington University in St. Louis, tells of Zytiga, a prostate cancer medicine approved last year. It costs $6,100 a month and insurers differ on how much they cover.

"I've had one patient pay $1.50 copay a month and another patient be quoted $5,943," Roth said. Now whenever he hears about a promising new cancer drug, he worries it will be another case "where finances end up determining who gets it."

Tyree, the woman from Virginia, said the hospital billed her insurer $14,865 for Neulasta, a shot to boost white blood cells and help her tolerate chemotherapy. Several cancer specialists said Neulasta usually costs less than half that amount, but the charge was $12,000 for Tyree's friend and blog postings by other cancer patients tell similar stories.

The worst part: A much cheaper alternative is available – a different formulation of Neulasta – but many patients aren't offered that option. There's even a cheaper way to get Neulasta, but hospitals make a lot of money giving the shot instead of teaching a patient or a caregiver how to do that.

Tyree said doctors told her Neulasta was "completely routine and everybody got it." She had no idea how much she and her insurer would have to pay for it until the bill came.

A recent American Cancer Society survey found that one-quarter of U.S. cancer patients put off getting a test or treatment because of cost, the group's chief medical officer, Dr. Otis Brawley, writes in his new book "How We Do Harm," which discusses costs and argues for more rational use of health care. One out of 5 survey respondents over 65 said they had used all or much of their savings on cancer care.

The burden hits hard on the middle class – people too well off for programs that cover the poor but unable to afford what cancer care often costs.

Dr. Amy Abernethy, director of the cancer care research program at Duke University, did a study of 250 such patients from around the country. Most were women with breast cancer, including Tyree. All but one had insurance, and two-thirds were covered by Medicare. The vast majority also had prescription drug coverage.

Their out-of-pocket expenses averaged $712 a month for doctor visits, medicines, lost wages and travel to appointments. To pay for cancer drugs, half spent less on food and clothes, and 43 percent borrowed money or used credit. Also, 26 percent did not fill a prescription, 22 percent filled part of one and 20 percent took less than prescribed.

"Patients don't just have cancer, and that's becoming more and more of a problem" because they also are struggling to buy medicines for heart disease, diabetes and other conditions, Abernethy said.

The challenge will grow as the newest trend in cancer care takes hold: using the new, gene-targeting drugs in combination. There has been limited success using them one at a time – they tend to buy a few more months or a year or two of life but usually are not cures.

"Almost certainly we will have to use multiple drugs" to shut down all of a tumor's pathways rather than just the main one attacked by a single drug, said Dr. Allen Lichter, the oncology society's chief.

Ironically, "one of the answers to making cancer therapy more cost-effective is to find these targeted agents" and use genetic tests to narrow down which patients really benefit instead of giving them to everyone with a particular type of cancer, Lichter said. For example, the new lung cancer drug Zalkori targets a gene that is present in only 5 percent of lung cancers, but it helps 60 percent of those patients.

Here's where things get sticky. Desperate patients often demand treatments that have a very small chance of helping them. And many doctors feel they have a duty to offer anything that might help, regardless of the cost to insurers and society, said Hassett, the policy researcher from Boston.

An example is the outcry over the government's recent withdrawal of approval of Avastin for breast cancer. Studies showed the drug did not improve survival for most women and there are no biomarkers to identify the few it does help. Many doctors and patients still want access to the drug, and Medicare is still paying for it.

But denying "useless" treatment isn't just about saving money – it's about avoiding harm and false hope, Brawley writes in his book. "A rational system of health care has to have the ability to say no, and to have it stick," he contends.

Cost can still be a concern long after initial treatment. Many breast cancer patients take medicines for five years to prevent a recurrence. Tyree, the woman from Virginia, is about to start on one of these, Arimidex. It is newer and somewhat more effective than tamoxifen, a medicine long used to prevent cancer's return, but it is also more expensive.

If insurance covers only part of it, "I'll have to pay," Tyree said. "And I don't have any idea how much it is."

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-- Patti Tyree was afraid that cancer would steal her future. Instead, the cost of treating it has. She had hoped to buy a small farm with money inherited from her mother. But copayments for just on...
-- Patti Tyree was afraid that cancer would steal her future. Instead, the cost of treating it has. She had hoped to buy a small farm with money inherited from her mother. But copayments for just on...
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11:37 AM on 02/27/2012
If the US Govt takes over the healthcare system via Obamacare, you may have this to look forward to:

Telegraph Feb, 2012

In an interview with the BBC, he said that governments across Europe had already cut drug prices by 5 per cent a year – costing GSK around £300 million per annum.

However, he said governments were now seeking to go further in an effort to achieve even bigger savings – and he highlighted Britain's decision to delay new cancer treatments.

"The bit I'm much more frightened about is that what's now beginning to become clear is that, in addition to price reductions, governments are delaying the approval of innovative new drugs," he said.

"So a second way they can save money, they think, is 'Let's just not buy the next round of innovation'.

How's Europe univeral healthcare looking now???
04:00 AM on 02/27/2012
The majority of us even with insurance are just one medical emergency away from bankruptcies. It really shouldn't be that way in this country.
07:28 PM on 02/27/2012
Sad, but true.
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01:15 AM on 02/27/2012
Get out of this country. You will be gouged for everything you have if you stay. It is everyone's fault for not having the strength to change things, the corporations pick us off, one by one, quietly.
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bluecatb
02:43 PM on 02/26/2012
Oh, my bad.

The treatment is low dose 50-100amps of electricity through the arterial veins carrying blood.

The device is velcroed on the wrist with cotton covered electrodes on the outside of the artery point.
The electricity goes through and kills any parasites, virus, bacteria or fungus in the blood, where it can never attach to healthy cells or reproduce. That is stopping it, killing it and removing it through the waste of the body.

It is worth the join for this. They had a tumor shrink method that after two weeks made cancer dissappear. This was by a German doctor. It is 2parts honey, maple syrup, or molasses mixed with 1 part baking soda in a 8 oz glass of water. The guy was diagnosed with pancreatic cancer 5 years ago and his docs can't find out the reason he's not dead.
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stape45
Spin this!
12:29 AM on 02/27/2012
Good article. I knew it could not have been here, in America. Cures just aren't profitable enough in the Land of the Greed and the Home of the Crave.
BTW, I'm already a fan.
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bluecatb
02:37 PM on 02/26/2012
Use the google english translation.
10:59 AM on 02/26/2012
It is hard to fight for your life and fight corporations' greed at the same time. Do we want to save lives or do we want to make money? And we dare to criticize other countries human rights...Nice
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Sharon Hanson
Skeptical of the *pseudo-skeptics*
07:53 PM on 02/26/2012
Watch Cut, Poison Burn. Most treatments do more harm than good. It is all about money and the Cancer Industrial Complex is alive and well.
10:26 AM on 02/26/2012
We need national health care...there is no way to get around it. With the growing problems of GMO seeds, hormones in our milk and animal products, we have a responsibility to our people when cancer is the result of our own countries greed and stupidity. Now they want more Fracking for natural gas when it will effect our drinking water and god only knows what else. The air we breath is increasingly toxic and our people are suffering lung issues and other health problems. When our own politics are to blame for these health issues then they should also take responsibility for the result.
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Sharon Hanson
Skeptical of the *pseudo-skeptics*
07:55 PM on 02/26/2012
The only problem gurubetty is that most cancer treatments make the doctors and pharma rich but do nothing to cure cancer. This is the problem in healthcare - the massive poisoning of the patient populaiton.
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savantpm
04:22 PM on 02/29/2012
But if the docs don't offer the poison and the patient dies, the family sues. Our legal profession is out of control, also.
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db025
10:24 AM on 02/26/2012
A few years ago I had occasion to ambulance my wife to the hospital a number of times. Every time I told them we had no insurance and would be paying cash the price dropped by 50%.

A $4,983 bill suddenly became $2,492.50. The $397 bill for use of sonogram machine became $198.5. When I asked how the hospital can stay in business by doing that I was told they do just fine on that amount, but even at the higher amount they lose money. The cost of filling out all the paperwork for insurance, outside billing agencies (required to review, analyse, and submit insurance billing), and meeting government requirements for that insurance eats them alive.

The only things I couldn't get a cut on were the reading of the sonogram, which had to be done by a licensed 'sonogram reader' because the gal that did the actual sonogram wasn't licensed to 'read' even though they both arrived at the same conclusion; and the billing company that does nothing but process medical billings. They were located in New Jersey! BTW, we're in CA. Off-site billing and other services drive costs thru the roof.

Get government out of medicine and all medical prices would drop like a lead ballon. Just think of the money saved from chasing Medicare an Medical cheats!
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Scholastica8
PEOPLE MATTER!
10:58 AM on 02/26/2012
That's interesting. It's usually the reverse. It used to be routine to give a 30% discount for paying in cash. Now, the general rule is when someone pays cash, double or triple the amount charged to the insurance company... and because everything is coded, and codes are often considered top secret, it's very hard to find out what exacly you are paying for.

When my dad passed, I saw $40 charge appear 20 times a day. I asked what that was and they said it was "disposable mucus removal device".... I kept digging... and discovered it was a tissue. They were basically charging $800/day for 1/4 of a box of Kleenex.
09:53 AM on 02/26/2012
I truly believe that there is a cure for cancer and the insurance companies as well as the pharmaceutical companies both know it. However, they both will probably make more money from the treatments and drugs than from the cure itself. This is why medicines are reaching out of control costs for people...'cause the philosophy that's being held is "bleed them 'til they're dead". I don't know how these people can sleep at night or look themselves in the mirror everyday.
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Sharon Hanson
Skeptical of the *pseudo-skeptics*
07:58 PM on 02/26/2012
Watch the story of Dr. Burzynski. You hit the nail on the head. Cut Poison Burn is also a good movie and is about the cancer industrial complex.

http://www.burzynskimovie.com/
04:12 AM on 02/26/2012
Many drug companies have patient access programs that help people having difficulty paying for their medication or their drug co-pay cost.

For Arimidex http://www.astrazeneca-us.com/help-affording-your-medicines/
For Avastin http://www.gene.com/gene/products/access/
For Neulasta http://www.neulasta.com/patient/support/patient_assistance.html?src=ppc&WT.srch=1&SRC=2
For Zytiga http://www.zytigahcp.com/zytigaone-support-for-patients#access2wellness
For Xalkori http://www.pfizerhelpfulanswers.com/pages/Find/FindAll.aspx

Partnership for Prescription Assistance http://www.pparx.org/
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db025
10:29 AM on 02/26/2012
Like government, if they can 'help' some people they can help all people. A blanket lowering of prices would allow many of those who they help now afford their meds without their help, and would make meds affordable for those on the cusp of the 'help/no help' line. To have $1.40 too much income to qualify for drug company assistance is a slap in the face when that same company is giving free of charge meds to the multimillionaire families of those sitting in Congress.
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Sharon Hanson
Skeptical of the *pseudo-skeptics*
07:59 PM on 02/26/2012
Fanned and faved. They don't want to help they want to bleed this country dry. The banks are beating them to it though.
10:21 PM on 02/26/2012
Which company gives free meds to the multimillionaire families of members of congress? I'm pretty sure that's not happening. For Avastin the cut-off is $100k adjusted gross income. This is the opposite of letting millionaires get free meds while the middle class has to pay.

I do think drugs are too expensive in this country, and something needs to be done about it. I think we should cap the amount that people can get awarded in lawsuits against drug manufacturers and have an arbitration system in place, where people can file claims to be reviewed by the FDA (or DOJ if that would be better) and cut all the ambulance chasing, 50% taking lawyers out of the picture. And lastly, I think they should offer drug companies the option of having longer exclusivity periods in exchange for considerably lower prices. This is especially true for biologics (like Avastin) where there won't be a great deal of interest from generics manufacturers due to the very complex manufacturing process.

I don't think a blanket lowering of costs will help people who can't pay that much. If you have to pay 20% of your medical costs, you'd be better off if the drug company paid your 20% for the cost of your medicine than if they cut their cost in half and you had to pay 20% of that.
12:37 AM on 02/26/2012
Insurance companies never find cures for cancer or heal broken bones. They are simply paper pushers who operate for PROFIT. There is something wrong with our system when we cry about "socialism" yet our money goes to pay people who dispense part of our premium for care and keep the rest for themselves.
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Sharon Hanson
Skeptical of the *pseudo-skeptics*
08:01 PM on 02/26/2012
I don't agree. I think they are going to provide an important watchdog function. The providers, doctors and pharma is bleeding us dry and poisoning us to boot. I know I was poisoned.
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Ossit
Ossit
11:58 PM on 02/25/2012
"If insurance covers only part of it, "I'll have to pay," Tyree said. "And I don't have any idea how much it is." Oh excuse me! You're worried about what your insurance you take for granted doesn't cover? Those without any insurance at all can't pay for treatment at all. They have to pay for everything. Whine about what your insurance pays half of? Go without insurance and you'll have something to gripe about because you can't get treatment that's the best. Minimal if any.
09:59 AM on 02/26/2012
Really? Having cancer and bankrupting yourself to stay alive isn't something to gripe about? Blame the insurance industry and the lack of single payer but to try to shame someone with a killing disease?
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Ossit
Ossit
03:54 PM on 02/26/2012
No, having cancer, and having insurance, and griping about what insurance does cover is something to gripe about, flowergirl. People with cancer and insurance have nothing to worry about. They get treated. One who has cancer and no insurance, you can be sure they'll get substandard if any treatment. No, I don't blame the insurance industry. They make it easy for people. I'm sick of people with insurance griping about everything because not everything is out of pocket. Single payer insurance is a heck of a lot better than not being able to afford insurance at all!
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01:23 AM on 02/27/2012
Real facts from this health analyst...so much of what is said to be the best, isn't. The best time to gouge people is when they are in fear of their life. So, they aren't told that except for a few cancers, most of the time the cancers they have are going to kill them in an average of four months. But they will be taken through chemo and radiation and surgery and other bushwa and lots of empty promises before they die. The ancient egyptians had a way of stopping such gauging, they had a government function which dictated which diseases a physician could say he could cure, might cure and couldn't cure. Now we have one where a physician always says he can cure or might cure or he just doesn't mention the odds.
11:56 PM on 02/25/2012
Many physicians have no idea what the costs of medical treatments, prescriptions, tests, etc., actually cost the patient. When I told my doctor the heart cardiogram/sonogram cost over $3500.00 he was surprised. Even more so when insurance won't cover it. He also didn't know the lab tests he routinely wants me to have to check for cholesterol etc., are over $250.00 and insurance doesn't cover those either. I am to the point now that I am not having regular checkups, blood work, or anything else done because it's just too expensive and I am a healthy person! Yes, they may come up with a cure for cancer but no one will be able to afford it. It's bad enough the cancer ruins your health then it ruins your financial dignity as well.
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Sharon Hanson
Skeptical of the *pseudo-skeptics*
08:03 PM on 02/26/2012
They already have come up with a cure Sharon but the FDA is suppressing it.
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Squiriferous
Back off, man. I'm a scientist.
07:31 PM on 02/25/2012
Q: Who would rob someone suffering from cancer?

A: Insurance companies, the scum of the Earth.
11:57 PM on 02/25/2012
So true. Dirty Greedy BastuRts!
05:29 PM on 02/25/2012
I have seen a lot of people diagnosed with cancer in the past 10 years. It seems like lately the # has increased especially with young friends of mine 35-45 years old. It is sad to see what cancer is doing to families. I lost a friend about a month ago after her 2 year battle with melanoma. She had 2 young children that now do not have a mother. It's just sad what this disease does. I have protected my family through Cancer Insurance. I didn't believe in it until I saw my mother use a policy. I then began to offer it to others in hopes of giving them peace of mind. I have helped many people slow down the financial effects of cancer over the years and it made me a strong believer in this coverage. Most would not even think about it until they see a family member or friend battle the disease and experience what cancer truly does to a family financially.

I would recommend anyone to at least see the costs and you will be surprised how inexpense it is. The best comparison site for it is http://www.esupplemental.com/cancer-insurance/

Hopefully a cure is found one day, because it is horrible what people have to go through.
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Squiriferous
Back off, man. I'm a scientist.
07:32 PM on 02/25/2012
If someone ever did develop a cure for cancer, the insurance companies would have them murdered.
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Sharon Hanson
Skeptical of the *pseudo-skeptics*
08:07 PM on 02/26/2012
Bull but pharma would. Watch the Burzynski movie and learn the truth, please before it is too late. People need to wake up to the poisoning by pharma with impunity. I was poisoned with gadolinium based contrasting agents used for MRIs I didn't need. I had good insurance and they paid for everything. I wish they didn't pay for these exams. I'm totally disabled. The insurance companies make more money if you are healthy. That's the Affordable Care Act is going to turn the insurance industry upside down. Pharma isn't going to like it. Also watch Cut, Poison Burn another good documentary.

http://www.burzynskimovie.com/