Health-insurance status is a determinant of the stage at presentation and of cancer control in European men treated with radical prostatectomy for clinically localized prostate cancer.

  • Andrea Gallina
  • Pierre I Karakiewicz
  • Felix Chun
  • Alberto Briganti
  • Markus Graefen
  • Francesco Montorsi
  • Jochen Walz
  • Claudio Jeldres
  • Andreas Erbersdobler
  • Andrea Salonia
  • Nazareno Suardi
  • Federico Dehò
  • Thorsten Schlomm
  • Vincenzo Scattoni
  • Alexander Haese
  • Hans Heinzer
  • Luc Valiquette
  • Patrizio Rigatti
  • Hartwig Huland

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To determine whether health-insurance status might result in more localized stage at presentation, more favourable stage at surgery and in a lower rate of biochemical recurrence (BCR), in patients diagnosed with prostate cancer and treated with radical prostatectomy (RP), as despite uninhibited access to healthcare, private and public health insurance are available in most European countries. PATIENTS AND METHODS: In all, 4442 consecutive men had RP in two large European centres, of whom 2372 had public and 2070 had private health insurance. The groups were compared for several variables according to insurance status (private vs public). Means and proportions tests were complemented with logistic regression or Kaplan-Meier analyses. RESULTS: Serum prostate-specific antigen level (P <0.001), clinical stage (P <0.001), pathological Gleason sum (P = 0.02), positive surgical margin rate (18.4% vs 25.4%, P <0.001), extracapsular extension rate (17.7% vs 20.0%, P = 0.047) and seminal vesicle invasion rate (9.6% vs 11.6%, P = 0.04) were more favourable in privately insured patients. Conversely, the rate of lymph-node involvement was higher in those with private than public insurance (4.4% vs 3.3%, P = 0.045). In univariate analyses addressing pathological variables, private insurance was invariably protective (all P <0.05). The Kaplan-Meier analyses showed that privately insured patients had a lower rate of BCR after RP (log-rank P = 0.017). CONCLUSION: Despite uninhibited access to healthcare, insurance status represents a rate-limiting variable, which affects stage at presentation and the outcome of cancer control.

Bibliographical data

Original languageGerman
Article number6
ISSN1464-4096
Publication statusPublished - 2007
pubmed 17428250