Deborah Kaye

Positions:

Assistant Professor of Surgery

Surgery, Urology
School of Medicine

Core Faculty Member, Duke-Margolis Center for Health Policy

Duke - Margolis Center For Health Policy
Institutes and Provost's Academic Units

Member in the Duke Clinical Research Institute

Duke Clinical Research Institute
School of Medicine

Member of the Duke Cancer Institute

Duke Cancer Institute
School of Medicine

Education:

B.A. 2002

Washington University in St. Louis

M.D. 2010

Medical College of Wisconsin

M.S. 2017

University of Michigan, Ann Arbor

Fellow, Clinical Research Training Program

National Institutes of Health

General Surgery Intern, Surgery

Johns Hopkins Medicine

Urology Resident

Johns Hopkins Medicine

Fellow, Society of Urologic Oncology, Urology

University of Michigan, Ann Arbor

Grants:

Disparities in the Use of Oral Anticancer Agents in Kidney Cancer

Administered By
Population Health Sciences
Awarded By
National Institutes of Health
Role
Collaborator
Start Date
End Date

Publications:

Medication Payments by Insurers and Patients for the Treatment of Metastatic Castrate-Resistant Prostate Cancer.

PURPOSE: The implications of high prices for cancer drugs on health care costs and patients' financial burdens are a growing concern. Patients with metastatic castrate-resistant prostate cancer (mCRPC) are often candidates for multiple first-line systemic therapies with similar impacts on life expectancy. However, little is known about the gross and out-of-pocket (OOP) payments associated with each of these drugs for patients with employer-sponsored health insurance. We therefore aimed to determine the gross and OOP payments of first-line drugs for mCRPC and how the payments vary across drugs. METHODS: This retrospective cohort study included 4,298 patients with prostate cancer who initiated therapy with one of six drugs approved for first-line treatment of mCRPC between July 1, 2013, and June 30, 2019. We compared gross and OOP payments during the 6 months after initiation of treatment for mCRPC using private payer claims data across patients using different first-line drugs. RESULTS: Gross payments varied across drugs. Over the 6 months after the index prescription, mean unadjusted gross drug payments were highest for patients receiving sipuleucel-T ($115,525 USD) and lowest for patients using docetaxel ($12,804 USD). OOP payments were lower than gross drug payments; mean 6-month OOP payments were highest for cabazitaxel ($1,044 USD) and lowest for docetaxel ($296 USD). There was a wide distribution of OOP payments within drug types. CONCLUSION: Drugs for mCRPC are expensive with large differences in payments by drug type. OOP payments among patients with employer-sponsored health insurance are much lower than gross drug payments, and they vary both across and within first-line drug types, with some patients making very high OOP payments. Although lowering drug prices would reduce pharmaceutical spending for patients with mCRPC, decreasing patient financial burden requires understanding an individual patient's benefit design.
Authors
Kaye, DR; Lee, H-J; Gordee, A; George, DJ; Ubel, PA; Scales, CD; Bundorf, MK
MLA Citation
Kaye, Deborah R., et al. “Medication Payments by Insurers and Patients for the Treatment of Metastatic Castrate-Resistant Prostate Cancer.Jco Oncol Pract, vol. 19, no. 4, Apr. 2023, pp. e600–17. Pubmed, doi:10.1200/OP.22.00645.
URI
https://scholars.duke.edu/individual/pub1563310
PMID
36689695
Source
pubmed
Published In
Jco Oncol Pract
Volume
19
Published Date
Start Page
e600
End Page
e617
DOI
10.1200/OP.22.00645

End-of-Life Care for Patients With Metastatic Renal Cell Carcinoma in the Era of Oral Anticancer Therapy.

PURPOSE: New therapies including oral anticancer agents (OAAs) have improved outcomes for patients with metastatic renal cell carcinoma (mRCC). However, little is known about the quality of end-of-life (EOL) care and systemic therapy use at EOL in patients receiving OAAs or with mRCC. METHODS: We retrospectively analyzed EOL care for decedents with mRCC in two parallel cohorts: (1) patients (RCC diagnosed 2004-2015) from the University of North Carolina's Cancer Information and Population Health Resource (CIPHR) and (2) patients (diagnosed 2007-2015) from SEER-Medicare. We assessed hospice use in the last 30 days of life and existing measures of poor-quality EOL care: systemic therapy, hospital admission, intensive care unit admission, and > 1 ED visit in the last 30 days of life; hospice initiation in the last 3 days of life; and in-hospital death. Associations between OAA use, patient and provider characteristics, and EOL care were examined using multivariable logistic regression. RESULTS: We identified 410 decedents in the CIPHR cohort (53.4% received OAA) and 1,508 in SEER-Medicare (43.5% received OAA). Prior OAA use was associated with increased systemic therapy in the last 30 days of life in both cohorts (CIPHR: 26.5% v 11.0%; P < .001; SEER-Medicare: 23.4% v 11.7%; P < .001), increased in-hospital death in CIPHR, and increased hospice in the last 30 days in SEER-Medicare. Older patients were less likely to receive systemic therapy or be admitted in the last 30 days or die in hospital. CONCLUSION: Patients with mRCC who received OAAs and younger patients experienced more aggressive EOL care, suggesting opportunities to optimize high-quality EOL care in these groups.
Authors
Dzimitrowicz, HE; Wilson, LE; Jackson, BE; Spees, LP; Baggett, CD; Greiner, MA; Kaye, DR; Zhang, T; George, D; Scales, CD; Pritchard, JE; Leapman, MS; Gross, CP; Dinan, MA; Wheeler, SB
MLA Citation
Dzimitrowicz, Hannah E., et al. “End-of-Life Care for Patients With Metastatic Renal Cell Carcinoma in the Era of Oral Anticancer Therapy.Jco Oncol Pract, vol. 19, no. 2, Feb. 2023, pp. e213–27. Pubmed, doi:10.1200/OP.22.00401.
URI
https://scholars.duke.edu/individual/pub1556754
PMID
36413741
Source
pubmed
Published In
Jco Oncol Pract
Volume
19
Published Date
Start Page
e213
End Page
e227
DOI
10.1200/OP.22.00401

Association Between Delivery System Structure and Intensity of End-of-Life Cancer Care.

PURPOSE: To determine whether the type of delivery system is associated with intensity of care at the end of life for Medicare beneficiaries with cancer. PATIENTS AND METHODS: We used SEER registry data linked with Medicare claims to evaluate intensity of end-of-life care for patients who died of one of ten common cancers diagnosed from 2009 through 2014. Patients were categorized as receiving the majority of their care in an integrated delivery system, designated cancer center, health system that was both integrated and a certified cancer center, or health system that was neither. We evaluated adherence to seven nationally endorsed end-of-life quality measures using generalized linear models across four delivery system types. RESULTS: Among 100,549 beneficiaries who died of cancer during the study interval, we identified only modest differences in intensity of end-of-life care across delivery system structures. Health systems with no cancer center or integrated affiliation demonstrated higher proportions of patients with multiple hospitalizations in the last 30 days of life (11.3%), death in an acute care setting (25.9%), and lack of hospice use in the last year of life (31.6%; all P < .001). Patients enrolled in hospice had lower intensity care across multiple end-of-life quality measures. CONCLUSION: Intensity of care at the end of life for patients with cancer was higher at delivery systems with no integration or cancer focus. Maximal supportive care delivered through hospice may be one avenue to reduce high-intensity care at the end of life and may impact quality of care for patients dying from cancer.
Authors
Herrel, LA; Zhu, Z; Griggs, JJ; Kaye, DR; Dupree, JM; Ellimoottil, CS; Miller, DC
MLA Citation
Herrel, Lindsey A., et al. “Association Between Delivery System Structure and Intensity of End-of-Life Cancer Care.Jco Oncol Pract, vol. 16, no. 7, July 2020, pp. e590–600. Pubmed, doi:10.1200/JOP.19.00667.
URI
https://scholars.duke.edu/individual/pub1452929
PMID
32069191
Source
pubmed
Published In
Jco Oncol Pract
Volume
16
Published Date
Start Page
e590
End Page
e600
DOI
10.1200/JOP.19.00667

Partial adrenalectomy: underused first line therapy for small adrenal tumors.

PURPOSE: Many patients with small adrenal masses undergo total adrenalectomy. We evaluated partial adrenalectomy outcomes by performing a comprehensive literature review. MATERIALS AND METHODS: We performed a PubMed search of the English language literature using the queries partial adrenalectomy and adrenal sparing surgery, and identified 317 and 155 articles, respectively. We excluded case reports or series with fewer than 5 patients, articles not focused on surgical management and those that did not indicate perioperative outcomes. The remaining articles were cross-referenced by author and institution to eliminate studies with redundant cases. Demographics, diagnosis, tumor characteristics, perioperative and functional outcomes, and recurrence data were collected when available. RESULTS: A total of 22 articles from a total of 22 first authors met our inclusion criteria, describing outcomes in a total of 417 patients. There has been an increasing trend toward partial adrenalectomy worldwide in the last 20 years. Partial adrenalectomy is most commonly done for Conn's syndrome, followed by pheochromocytoma. Most procedures are laparoscopic with minimal morbidity. The recurrence rate is only 3% and more than 90% of patients remain steroid independent. CONCLUSIONS: Partial adrenalectomy surgical outcomes and perioperative complications are similar to those reported for total adrenalectomy. When partial adrenalectomy is done for small adrenal lesions, the malignancy rate is negligible, the recurrence rate is low and most patients remain steroid-free at long-term followup. These data strongly support the acceptance of partial adrenalectomy as first line treatment for small adrenal masses.
Authors
Kaye, DR; Storey, BB; Pacak, K; Pinto, PA; Linehan, WM; Bratslavsky, G
MLA Citation
Kaye, Deborah R., et al. “Partial adrenalectomy: underused first line therapy for small adrenal tumors.J Urol, vol. 184, no. 1, July 2010, pp. 18–25. Pubmed, doi:10.1016/j.juro.2010.03.052.
URI
https://scholars.duke.edu/individual/pub1451422
PMID
20546805
Source
pubmed
Published In
The Journal of Urology
Volume
184
Published Date
Start Page
18
End Page
25
DOI
10.1016/j.juro.2010.03.052

Oral Anticancer Agent (OAA) Adherence and Survival in Elderly Patients With Metastatic Renal Cell Carcinoma (mRCC).

OBJECTIVE: To examine real-world adherence to oral anticancer agents (OAAs) and its association with outcomes among Medicare beneficiaries with metastatic renal cell carcinoma (mRCC). METHODS: SEER-Medicare retrospective cohort study of patients with metastatic renal cell carcinoma (mRCC) who received an OAA between 2007 and 2015. We examined A) adherence and B) overall and disease-specific 2-year survival landmarked at 3 months after OAA initiation. Adherence was assessed by calculating the proportion of days covered (PDC) within 3 months of OAA initiation, with adherent use being defined as PDC > 80%. RESULTS: A total of 905 patients met study criteria, of whom 445 patients (49.2%) were categorized as adherent to initial OAA treatment. Adjusting for clinical and demographic factors revealed decreased odds of adherence associated with living within an impoverished neighborhood (OR 0.49, CI 0.0.33 - 0.74) and out-of-pocket costs > $200 (OR 0.68, CI 0.47-.98). Adherence was associated with improved 2-year survival in univariate analysis (logrank test, P = .01) and a non-significant trend toward an association with decreased all-cause (HR 0.87, CI 0.72 - 1.05) and RCC-specific survival (HR 0.84, CI 0.69 - 1.03) in multivariable analysis. CONCLUSION: Local poverty levels and high out-of-pocket costs are associated with poor initial adherence to OAA therapy in Medicare beneficiaries with mRCC, which in turn, suggests a trend toward poor overall and disease-specific survival. Efforts to improve outcomes in the broader mRCC population should incorporate OAA adherence and economic factors.
Authors
Dinan, MA; Wilson, LE; Greiner, MA; Spees, LP; Pritchard, JE; Zhang, T; Kaye, D; George, D; Scales, CD; Baggett, CD; Gross, CP; Leapman, MS; Wheeler, SB
MLA Citation
Dinan, Michaela A., et al. “Oral Anticancer Agent (OAA) Adherence and Survival in Elderly Patients With Metastatic Renal Cell Carcinoma (mRCC).Urology, vol. 168, Oct. 2022, pp. 129–36. Pubmed, doi:10.1016/j.urology.2022.07.012.
URI
https://scholars.duke.edu/individual/pub1529018
PMID
35878815
Source
pubmed
Published In
Urology
Volume
168
Published Date
Start Page
129
End Page
136
DOI
10.1016/j.urology.2022.07.012