# Impact of Medicaid Enrollment Timing on Tumor Stage at Diagnosis and Survival in Breast, Colorectal, and Lung Cancer

**Authors:** Gabriel A. Benavidez, Stella Self, Anthony J. Alberg, Janice Probst, Jan M. Eberth

PMC · DOI: 10.3390/healthcare14060713 · 2026-03-11

## TL;DR

Medicaid enrollment timing affects cancer diagnosis stage and survival, with post-diagnosis enrollment linked to worse outcomes for most cancers.

## Contribution

This study reveals how Medicaid enrollment timing influences cancer outcomes, highlighting disparities in late-stage diagnosis and survival.

## Key findings

- Post-diagnosis Medicaid enrollees had the highest odds of late-stage cancer diagnosis across all three cancer types.
- Cancer-specific mortality was higher for both pre- and post-diagnosis Medicaid enrollees compared to non-Medicaid patients.
- Post-diagnosis enrollment was associated with higher mortality for localized-stage colorectal and lung cancers but lower mortality for distant-stage breast cancer.

## Abstract

Background: Medicaid-insured patients experience higher rates of late-stage cancer diagnosis and worse survival than non-Medicaid patients. The impact of Medicaid enrollment timing on cancer outcomes is less clear. This study examines the association between Medicaid enrollment and timing with tumor stage and cancer-specific survival for breast, colorectal, and lung cancers. Methods: We analyzed SEER-Medicaid linked data for 276,755 breast, 104,784 colorectal, and 101,058 lung cancer patients < 65 years of age. Patients were categorized as non-Medicaid enrollees, pre-diagnosis enrollees (≥12 months before), or post-diagnosis enrollees (≤12 months after). Multivariable logistic regression estimated odds ratios of late-stage diagnosis, and cause-specific Cox proportional hazards models were used to assess cancer-specific survival, adjusting for demographic and socioeconomic factors. Results: Compared to non-Medicaid enrollees, post-diagnosis enrollees had the highest odds of late-stage diagnosis (breast cancer: OR: 3.41; colorectal cancer: OR: 3.78; lung cancer: OR: 1.87). Pre-diagnosis enrollees also had increased odds, but the association was weaker than post-diagnosis enrollees. Cancer-specific mortality was higher for both pre- and post-diagnosis enrollees compared to non-Medicaid enrollees for each cancer examined across tumor stage at diagnosis. Among Medicaid enrollees, those enrolled post-diagnosis had higher cancer-specific mortality than those enrolled pre-diagnosis for localized-stage colorectal (HR: 1.82) and lung cancer (HR: 1.30). In contrast, those enrolled post-diagnosis had lower mortality than those enrolled pre diagnosis for distant-stage breast cancer (HR: 0.91). Conclusions: Compared with cancer patients not insured by Medicaid, post-diagnosis Medicaid enrollment was associated with a greater likelihood of late-stage cancer and worse cancer-specific survival across each cancer type examined. Future research is warranted to examine the role of Medicaid enrollment timing in cancer care to better understand its impact on cancer outcomes.

## Linked entities

- **Diseases:** breast cancer (MONDO:0004989), colorectal cancer (MONDO:0005575), lung cancer (MONDO:0005138)

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** Cancer (MESH:D009369), lung cancer (MESH:D008175), late (MESH:D000067562), Breast, Colorectal, and Lung Cancer (MESH:D001943), breast (MESH:D061325), colorectal (MESH:D015179)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC13025793