Cost consequences of unscheduled emergency admissions in cancer patients in the last year of life

Ethna McFerran*, Victoria Cairnduff, Ray Elder, Anna Gavin, Mark Lawler

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

4 Citations (Scopus)
64 Downloads (Pure)

Abstract

Objectives
Cancer is a leading cause of death. This paper examines the utilisation of unscheduled emergency end-of-life healthcare and estimates expenditure in this domain. We explore care patterns and quantify the likely benefits from service reconfigurations which may influence rates of hospital admission and deaths.

Methods
Using prevalence-based retrospective data from the Northern Ireland General Registrar’s Office linked by cancer diagnosis to Patient Administration episode data for unscheduled emergency care (1st January 2014 to 31st December 2015), we estimate unscheduled-emergency-care costs in the last year of life. We model potential resources released by reductions in length-of-stay for cancer patients. Linear regression examined patient characteristics affecting length of stay.

Results
A total of 3134 cancer patients used 60,746 days of unscheduled emergency care (average 19.5 days). Of these, 48.9% had ≥1 admission during their last 28 days of life. Total estimated cost was £28,684,261, averaging £9200 per person. Lung cancer patients had the highest proportion of admissions (23.2%, mean length of stay = 17.9 days, mean cost=£7224). The highest service use and total cost was in those diagnosed at stage IV (38.4%), who required 22,099 days of care, costing £9,629,014. Palliative care support, identified in 25.5% of patients, contributed £1,322,328. A 3-day reduction in the mean length of stay with a 10% reduction in admissions, could reduce costs by £7.37 million. Regression analyses explained 41% of length-of-stay variability.

Conclusions
The cost burden from unscheduled care use in the last year of life of cancer patients is significant. Opportunities to prioritise service reconfiguration for high-costing users emphasized lung and colorectal cancers as offering the greatest potential to influence outcomes.

Original languageEnglish
Article number201
Number of pages12
JournalSupportive Care in Cancer
Volume31
Issue number3
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 01 Mar 2023

Bibliographical note

URL 2:
The primary report of the data applied in this study was reported in 'Macmillan - NICR Partnership: Emergency Admissions in the Last Year of Life for People Dying of Cancer in Northern Ireland in 2015'.

This report details the diagnostic codes for admissions, and the epidemiological features of the dataset, and discusses issues around out-of-hours use, rurality, and time from diagnosis among a range of features identified in the data.

The cost consequences of the cohort were then addressed in the accompanying paper here.


URL 3:
A new report by the NI Cancer Registry at Queen’s University Belfast and Macmillan Cancer Support warns of the significant impact of emergency admissions on cancer patients in Northern Ireland.

Keywords

  • End of Life Care
  • Palliative Care
  • Cancer
  • Health Economics
  • Cost of Illness
  • Quality of Health Care
  • Hospitalization
  • Unscheduled emergency care
  • Linear Regression

Fingerprint

Dive into the research topics of 'Cost consequences of unscheduled emergency admissions in cancer patients in the last year of life'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.

Cite this