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Evidence of a positive association between malpractice climate and thyroid cancer incidence in the United States. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • The incidence of thyroid cancer has increased significantly, likely due to overdiagnosis rather than actual rise in cases.
  • A study examined how malpractice climate, measured by malpractice payout rates, correlates with cancer incidence across several types in U.S. states from 1999-2012.
  • Results showed that higher malpractice payout rates were linked to increased thyroid cancer diagnoses, suggesting that defensive medicine practices could lead to more diagnostic testing and overdiagnosis in those states.

Article Abstract

The incidence of thyroid cancer has risen dramatically in the past few decades. The cause of this is unclear, but several lines of evidence indicate it is largely due to overdiagnosis, the diagnosis of tumors that would have never manifest clinically if untreated. Practices leading to overdiagnosis may relate to defensive medicine. In this study, we evaluated the association between malpractice climate and incidence of thyroid, breast, prostate, colon, and lung cancer in U.S. states from 1999-2012 using publicly available government data. State-level malpractice risk was quantified as malpractice payout rate, the number of malpractice payouts per 100,000 people per state per year. Associations between state-level cancer incidence, malpractice payout rate, and several cancer risk factors were evaluated. Risk factors included several social determinants of health, including factors predicting healthcare access. States with higher malpractice payout rate had higher thyroid cancer incidence, on both univariate analysis (r = 0.51, P = 0.009, Spearman) and multivariate analysis (P<0.001, multilevel model). In contrast, state-level malpractice payout rate was not associated with incidence of any other cancer type. Malpractice climate may be a social determinant for being diagnosed with thyroid cancer. This may be a product of greater defensive medicine in states with higher malpractice risk, which leads to increased diagnostic testing of patients with thyroid nodules and potential overdiagnosis. Alternatively, malpractice risk may be a proxy for another, unmeasured risk factor.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6051569PMC
http://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0199862PLOS

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