UAB Comprehensive Cancer Center Magazine Fall 2016 | Page 17

LUCIANO JOSE COSTA, M. D., PH. D.
A new UAB study has revealed that socioeconomic factors, not race or ethnicity, influence the survival of younger multiple myeloma patients.
Advances in treatment of multiple myeloma have led to improved survival, predominantly among young and white patients, with fewer benefits experienced by patients of other ethnicities.
The UAB study, which was published in Cancer, a peer-reviewed journal of the American Cancer Society, indicates this gap is due mostly to socioeconomic differences such as marital status, income and insurance status that directly and independently affect the chances of survival among younger multiple myeloma patients, not necessarily race or ethnic background.
Luciano Jose Costa, M. D., Ph. D., associate professor in the UAB Division of Hematology and Oncology and UAB Comprehensive Cancer Center scientist, led a team that studied data of more than 10,000 multiple myeloma patients in the United States who were under the age of 65 – the largest and most complete study to address the impact of sociodemographic factors on survival of myeloma patients in that age group.
“ When socioeconomic factors were accounted for, we found that race did not impact survival,” Dr. Costa says.
Multiple myeloma, a cancer that forms in a type of white blood cell, is the second-most common hematologic malignancy in the United States, with 30,300 new cases expected in 2016. Multiple myeloma is a rare cancer, and the mortality rate is high with a five-year survival rate of only 47 percent. It most frequently occurs in patients 65 or older; however, about 38 percent of new cases are age 65 or younger.
Although it has been known that African- American patients have had reduced improvement in outcomes compared to Caucasian patients, Dr. Costa and his team suspected it was more complex than that. They found that the four-year estimated survival was 71.1 percent, 63.2 percent, 53.4 percent and 46.5 percent for patients with zero, one, two or three adverse sociodemographic factors, respectively. For instance, a patient who is not married, lives in a lowincome county and is a beneficiary of Medicare has a 25 percent lower chance of being alive in four years after diagnosis than a patient of the same age who is married and lives in a medium- to high-income county and has private insurance.
“ Our findings strongly suggest there is a huge disparity in outcomes that could potentially be overcome by improving access and affordability of treatment,” says Dr. Costa.“ With the recent emphasis on comparative effectiveness in oncology, it also becomes crucial that all variables affecting outcomes, including sociodemographic factors, are accounted for when comparisons between different therapeutic approaches and health care systems are made.”
The bottom line, according to Dr. Costa, is that“ these potentially avoidable determinants indicate new opportunities for improving outcomes for multiple myeloma patients.”
“ Our findings strongly suggest there is a huge disparity in outcomes that could potentially be overcome by improving access and affordability of treatment.”
Luciano Jose Costa, M. D., Ph. D., associate professor in the UAB Division of Hematology and Oncology and UAB Comprehensive Cancer Center scientist
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