JCO Global Oncology (Nov 2020)

Treatment Outcomes of Patients With Colorectal Cancer Enrolled in a Comprehensive Benefits Program of the National Insurance System in the Philippines: Data From the Pilot Site

  • Frederic Ivan L. Ting,
  • Danielle Benedict L. Sacdalan,
  • Mayou Martin T. Tampo,
  • Rosielyn T. Apellido,
  • Hermogenes J. Monroy,
  • Marie Dione P. Sacdalan,
  • Dennis L. Sacdalan

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1200/JGO.19.00332
Journal volume & issue
no. 6
pp. 35 – 46

Abstract

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PURPOSECancer treatment causes significant financial burden, especially in developing countries such as the Philippines. This led the Philippine Department of Health to create the Z-Package colorectal cancer benefit program, an insurance system specifically designed to treat Filipinos with colorectal cancers with early to locally advanced-stage disease. The main goal of this program is to optimize treatment outcomes for this curable disease without causing financial toxicity.MATERIALS AND METHODSThree-year data on patients enrolled in the Z-Package colorectal cancer benefit program from 2016 to 2018 were reviewed by the University of the Philippines, Philippine General Hospital Colorectal Polyp and Cancer Study Group.RESULTSA total of 251 patients were enrolled in the Z-package colorectal cancer benefit program from 2016 to 2018. Mean age was 57 years old and a majority of patients (66%) were male. A majority of patients had rectal cancer (78%) and were diagnosed with stage III disease (82%). A majority (75%) were compliant to their treatment plans and clinic follow-up. Specifically, compliance to the prescribed surgery, chemotherapy, and/or radiation treatment were 90%, 77%, and 96%, respectively. Recurrence, morbidity, and mortality rates of enrolled patients in the Z-Package program from 2016 to 2018 were 17%, 22%, and 19%, respectively. Morbidities were mostly chemotherapy related (8%). Finally, patients in this program had a 2- and 3-year survival probability of 74% and 70%, respectively, which are comparable with data from more developed nations.CONCLUSIONResults of this study include real-world data that show that when the highest standards of patient care are provided through a multidisciplinary team, patients’ overall survival is also maximized.