Background: As the life expectancy of the cystic fibrosis (CF) population is lengthening with modulator therapies, diligent age-appropriate screening and preventive care are increasingly vital for long-term health and wellbeing.
Methods: We performed a retrospective analysis comparing rates of receiving age- and sex-appropriate preventive services by commercially insured adult people with CF (PwCF) and adults without CF from the general population (GP) via the Truven Health MarketScan database (2012-2018).
Results: We captured 25,369 adults with CF and 488,534 adults from the GP in the United States. Comparing these groups, we found that 43% versus 39% received an annual preventive visit, 28% versus 28% were screened for chlamydia, 38% versus 37% received pap smears every 3 years (21-29-year-old females), 33% versus 31% received pap smears every 5 years (30-64-year-old females), 55% versus 44% received mammograms, 23% versus 21% received colonoscopies, and 21% versus 20% received dyslipidemia screening (all screening rates expressed per 100 person-years). In age-stratified analysis, 18-27-year-old PwCF had a lower rate of annual preventive visits compared to adults in the same age group of the GP (27% versus 42%).
Conclusions: We discovered a comparable-to-superior rate of preventive service utilization in adults with CF relative to the GP, except in young adulthood from 18-27 years. Our findings establish the importance of meeting the primary care needs of adults with CF and call for development of strategies to improve preventive service delivery to young adults.
Keywords: Colonoscopy; Mammogram; Pap smear; Primary care; Screening.
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