Creighton University School of Medicine, Omaha, NE
Alec Czaplicki , Christopher Reese Bine , Aron Lee , Eric Nielsen , Peter T. Silberstein
Background: Fibrolamellar hepatocellular carcinoma (FL-HCC), encompassing 1%-5% of all liver cancers, is a rare, malignant cancer that typically affects patients less than 40 years old. FL-HCC usually affects individuals with healthy livers and initially presents asymptomatically. Prior studies describe the importance of surgery on survival, with a 5-year survival of about 44%-68% with surgery versus 2%-17% without surgery. Disparities in outcomes regarding surgical factors and survival between private insurance, Medicare, Medicaid, and no insurance remain unknown. This study aims to determine differential surgical factors and survival of patients with FL-HCC based on insurance status. Methods: The National Cancer Database was used to identify patients diagnosed with FL-HCC from 2004-2019 using the histology code 8171 as assigned by the Commission on Cancer Accreditation program. Kaplan-Meier, Chi-Square, ANOVA, and Cox Proportional Hazards tests were performed. Data was analyzed using SPSS version 29 and statistical significance was set at α=0.05. Results: Of the 436 patients included, 241 (55%) had private insurance and 96 (22%) had Medicare. Patients with private insurance had a longer median survival (49 months) than patients with Medicare (18 months; p<.001) and Medicaid (26 months; p<.004);no significant survival difference existed between Medicare, Medicaid, and no insurance (39 months) (p’s≥.063). After controlling for age, income, tumor size, adjuvant therapy, receiving surgery, and surgical margins of primary site, private insurance was associated with an independent decrease in hazard (HR=.899; p=.004).Patients with private insurance received more surgery (68%) than those with Medicaid (50%), no insurance (48%), and Medicare (32%) (p’s<.001); grade did not differ amongst insurance types (p=.069).Furthermore, patients with private insurance had more surgical margins of the primary tumor site without residual tumor (57%) compared to those with Medicaid (40%), no insurance (38%), and Medicare (23%) (p’s<.001).While patients with Medicare presented with greater co-morbidities, age at diagnosis (67), tumor size (476 mm), positive regional lymph nodes (90), and days between diagnosis and treatment (45), patients with private insurance presented at a younger age (31) with fewer co-morbidities, smaller sized tumors (366 mm), and fewer days between diagnosis and treatment (26) (p’s<.018). Conclusions: Since patients with private insurance received the most surgery, best surgical margins, and displayed the highest overall survival, while patients with Medicare were diagnosed at the highest age with the largest tumor size and most positive regional lymph nodes, future research should explore ways to alleviate the disparity in factors affecting surgical resections and early diagnoses among insurance statuses.
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