Smoking, depression, and hospital costs of respiratory cancers: Examining race and sex variation

Fam Med Community Health. 2017;5(1):29-42. doi: 10.15212/FMCH.2017.0109. Epub 2017 May 1.

Abstract

Objective: The role of smoking and depression relative to hospital cost for lung cancer (LC) remains unknown.

Methods: We extracted data on depression, smoking history, demographics, and hospital charges on patients with respiratory cancers (ICD-9 codes 161-163,165) from the 2008 Tennessee Hospital Discharge Data System. The sample (n=6,665) was mostly white (86%) and male (57). Age-adjusted rates were developed per CDC methodology, and hospital costs were compared for LC with vs. without depression and smoking.

Results: Three findings (p<.001) emerged: (i) LC rate was higher among blacks than whites, and higher among males than females; (ii) While 66% of LC smoked (more males than females without racial variation), 24% had depression (more females and whites were depressed); (iii) The LC hospital cost was 54% higher compared to non-LC, and this cost doubled for LC with depression and smoking vs. those without such characteristics.

Conclusion: While LC is more prevalent among blacks and males, depression is higher among female and white patients. Since depression with higher costs existed among LC patients, our findings point to: (i) possibility of cost savings by diagnosing and treating depression among LC, and (ii) implementing proven smoking cessation programs to reduce LC morbidity and hospital costs.

Keywords: Smoking; depression; gender; lung cancer; race.