Coverage gaps can hamper access to some breast cancer screening, care
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MICHELLE ANDREWS, KAISER HEALTH NEWS
Breast cancer or the
threat of it is a reality in too many women’s lives, including that of the
actress Angelina Jolie as we learned earlier this month. As women mull their
options for genetic testing, screening and treatment for the disease, one
factor that can loom large is the extent to which their health insurance will
cover whatever choices they make.
Most coverage is pretty
good, experts agree, and it's getting better under the Affordable Care Act.
Still, there are weak spots, and some plans are woefully inadequate. In those
instances, a woman may face high out-of-pocket costs or have to appeal plan
denials to get the coverage she needs.
Jolie announced that she
underwent genetic testing and, after learning she has a genetic mutation that
significantly increases her risk of breast and ovarian cancers, had a double
mastectomy. Her mother died of ovarian cancer at age 56.
If a woman has a family
history of breast or ovarian cancer, many health plans cover genetic counseling
and testing to identify mutations in the BRCA1 and BRCA2 genes that are known
to increase risk of disease. Inherited BRCA1 and BRCA2 mutations account for an
estimated 5 to 10 percent of breast cancers and up to 15 percent of ovarian
cancers, according to the National Cancer Institute.
The
test costs roughly $3,000. Genetic counseling is less expensive but can still
cost hundreds of dollars, experts say. Although testing may be a covered
benefit, the out-of-pocket costs can be significant, says Mary Daly, chair of
the department of clinical genetics at Fox Chase Cancer Center in Philadelphia.
For example, if a patient is responsible for 20 percent of the test's cost, it
could run $600.
"In
the smaller health-care plans, the coverage gets worse and worse," she
says.
As
part of the Affordable Care Act, individual and group plans that are not
grandfathered must provide genetic counseling and testing without any patient
cost-sharing for women whose family history indicates a likely mutation.
For
older women, Medicare generally covers genetic testing only if a woman has
received a diagnosis of breast cancer.
Actress
Angelina Jolie explained in a New York Times column earlier this month why she
chose to have a bilateral mastectomy preventatively (Photo by Oli Scarff/Getty
Images).
Insurers
rarely object when women who test positive for a genetic mutation decide on
surgery to remove their breasts or ovaries, experts say. It doesn't matter
whether they already have cancer.
The
average woman has about a 12 percent chance of developing breast cancer in her
lifetime. Many women are at above-average risk for breast cancer for many
reasons, including family history and dense breast tissue. They may need
stepped-up screening for breast cancer, including earlier mammograms, for
example, even though they're unlikely to have a faulty gene that predisposes
them to cancer.
At
the University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center in Houston, clinicians
generally recommend a highly sensitive MRI test to screen for breast cancer if
a woman's lifetime risk is 20 percent or higher, says Therese Bevers, medical
director of the cancer prevention center at MD Anderson.
"Sometimes
insurers don't accept that," says Bevers, who chairs the breast cancer
screening and diagnosis panel of the National Comprehensive Cancer Network.
"There's no one standard. Each plan seems to differ."
If
the test, which can cost $2,000 or more, isn't approved by the insurer, the
"vast majority" of patients don't do it, says Bevers.
The
Affordable Care Act says patients can receive preventive services aimed at
high-risk individuals without paying anything out of pocket, but which services
are covered remains unclear.
Among
women with cancer in one breast, a growing number want to have both breasts
removed, Daly says, even in the absence of a genetic mutation. One study found
the proportion of patients making this choice increased from 4.2 percent in
1998 to 11 percent in 2003.
It's
a troubling trend, she says, since the likelihood that a woman will get cancer
in the other breast is small. But insurers generally approve the surgery
anyway, in her experience.
Federal
law requires coverage of breast reconstruction for insured women following a
mastectomy.
But
women sometimes encounter coverage problems related to services they need after
they've been treated for breast cancer. For example, some women develop
lymphedema, a chronic condition that results in fluid retention and tissue
swelling that can be painful and lead to infection.
Coverage
for the compression sleeves these women need to wear is sometimes limited, says
Erin Reidy, associate director of policy at the American Cancer Society's
Cancer Action Network. Ongoing physical therapy is sometimes limited as well,
she says.
The
health law prohibits lifetime dollar limits on medical services, but it allows
visit limits for some types of services, Reidy says. A plan might permit only
60 physical therapy visits over a lifetime, for example.
"Someone
with chronic lymphedema might blow right through that," she says.
--
Kaiser
Health News <http://www.kaiserhealthnews.org> is an editorially
independent program of the Henry J. Kaiser Family Foundation, a nonprofit,
nonpartisan health policy research and communication organization not
affiliated with Kaiser Permanente.
Read more at http://www.philly.com/philly/health/healthcare-exchange/Coverage_gaps_can_hamper_access_to_some_breast_cancer_screening_care_.html#bW0qc5CiI3ZWiydd.99
Breast cancer or the
threat of it is a reality in too many women’s lives, including that of the
actress Angelina Jolie as we learned earlier this month. As women mull their
options for genetic testing, screening and treatment for the disease, one
factor that can loom large is the extent to which their health insurance will
cover whatever choices they make.
Most coverage is pretty
good, experts agree, and it's getting better under the Affordable Care Act.
Still, there are weak spots, and some plans are woefully inadequate. In those
instances, a woman may face high out-of-pocket costs or have to appeal plan
denials to get the coverage she needs.
Jolie announced that she
underwent genetic testing and, after learning she has a genetic mutation that
significantly increases her risk of breast and ovarian cancers, had a double
mastectomy. Her mother died of ovarian cancer at age 56.
If a woman has a family
history of breast or ovarian cancer, many health plans cover genetic counseling
and testing to identify mutations in the BRCA1 and BRCA2 genes that are known
to increase risk of disease. Inherited BRCA1 and BRCA2 mutations account for an
estimated 5 to 10 percent of breast cancers and up to 15 percent of ovarian
cancers, according to the National Cancer Institute.
The
test costs roughly $3,000. Genetic counseling is less expensive but can still
cost hundreds of dollars, experts say. Although testing may be a covered
benefit, the out-of-pocket costs can be significant, says Mary Daly, chair of
the department of clinical genetics at Fox Chase Cancer Center in Philadelphia.
For example, if a patient is responsible for 20 percent of the test's cost, it
could run $600.
"In
the smaller health-care plans, the coverage gets worse and worse," she
says.
As
part of the Affordable Care Act, individual and group plans that are not
grandfathered must provide genetic counseling and testing without any patient
cost-sharing for women whose family history indicates a likely mutation.
For
older women, Medicare generally covers genetic testing only if a woman has
received a diagnosis of breast cancer.
Actress
Angelina Jolie explained in a New York Times column earlier this month why she
chose to have a bilateral mastectomy preventatively (Photo by Oli Scarff/Getty
Images).
Insurers
rarely object when women who test positive for a genetic mutation decide on
surgery to remove their breasts or ovaries, experts say. It doesn't matter
whether they already have cancer.
The
average woman has about a 12 percent chance of developing breast cancer in her
lifetime. Many women are at above-average risk for breast cancer for many
reasons, including family history and dense breast tissue. They may need
stepped-up screening for breast cancer, including earlier mammograms, for
example, even though they're unlikely to have a faulty gene that predisposes
them to cancer.
At
the University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center in Houston, clinicians
generally recommend a highly sensitive MRI test to screen for breast cancer if
a woman's lifetime risk is 20 percent or higher, says Therese Bevers, medical
director of the cancer prevention center at MD Anderson.
"Sometimes
insurers don't accept that," says Bevers, who chairs the breast cancer
screening and diagnosis panel of the National Comprehensive Cancer Network.
"There's no one standard. Each plan seems to differ."
If
the test, which can cost $2,000 or more, isn't approved by the insurer, the
"vast majority" of patients don't do it, says Bevers.
The
Affordable Care Act says patients can receive preventive services aimed at
high-risk individuals without paying anything out of pocket, but which services
are covered remains unclear.
Among
women with cancer in one breast, a growing number want to have both breasts
removed, Daly says, even in the absence of a genetic mutation. One study found
the proportion of patients making this choice increased from 4.2 percent in
1998 to 11 percent in 2003.
It's
a troubling trend, she says, since the likelihood that a woman will get cancer
in the other breast is small. But insurers generally approve the surgery
anyway, in her experience.
Federal
law requires coverage of breast reconstruction for insured women following a
mastectomy.
But
women sometimes encounter coverage problems related to services they need after
they've been treated for breast cancer. For example, some women develop
lymphedema, a chronic condition that results in fluid retention and tissue
swelling that can be painful and lead to infection.
Coverage
for the compression sleeves these women need to wear is sometimes limited, says
Erin Reidy, associate director of policy at the American Cancer Society's
Cancer Action Network. Ongoing physical therapy is sometimes limited as well,
she says.
The
health law prohibits lifetime dollar limits on medical services, but it allows
visit limits for some types of services, Reidy says. A plan might permit only
60 physical therapy visits over a lifetime, for example.
"Someone
with chronic lymphedema might blow right through that," she says.
--
Kaiser
Health News <http://www.kaiserhealthnews.org> is an editorially
independent program of the Henry J. Kaiser Family Foundation, a nonprofit,
nonpartisan health policy research and communication organization not
affiliated with Kaiser Permanente.
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