Maxine Dunitz Neurosurgical Institute, Department of Neurosurgery, Cedars-Sinai Medical Center, Los Angeles, CA 90048, USA.
J Clin Neurosci. 2013 Jan;20(1):57-61. doi: 10.1016/j.jocn.2012.05.014. Epub 2012 Oct 16.
The presence of healthcare-related disparities is an ongoing, widespread, and well-documented societal and health policy issue. We investigated the presence of racial disparities among post-operative patients either with meningioma or malignant, benign, or metastatic brain tumors. We used the Medicaid component of the Thomson Reuter's MarketScan database from 2000 to 2009. Univariate and multivariate analysis assessed death, 30-day post-operative risk of complications, length of stay, and total charges. We identified 2321 patients, 73.7% were Caucasian, 57.8% were women; with Charlson comorbidity scores of <3 (56.2%) and treated at low-volume centers (73.4%). Among all, 26.3% of patients were of African-American ethnicity and 22.1% had meningiomas. Mortality was 2.0%, mean length of stay (LOS) was 9 days, mean total charges were US$42,422, an adverse discharge occurred in 22.5% of patients, and overall 30-day complication rate was 23.4%. In a multivariate analysis, African-American patients with meningiomas had higher odds of developing a 30-day complication (p=0.05) and were significantly more likely to have longer LOS (p<0.001) and greater total charges (p<0.001) relative to Caucasian counterparts. The presence of one post-operative complication doubled LOS and nearly doubled total charges, while the presence of two post-operative complications tripled these outcomes. Patients of African-American ethnicity had significantly higher post-operative complications than those of Caucasian ethnicity. This higher rate of complications seems to have driven greater healthcare utilization, including greater LOS and total charges, among African-American patients. Interventions aimed at reducing complications among African-American patients with brain tumor may help reduce post-operative disparities.
医疗保健相关差异的存在是一个持续存在的、广泛存在的、并有充分记录的社会和健康政策问题。我们调查了脑膜瘤或恶性、良性或转移性脑肿瘤术后患者中是否存在种族差异。我们使用了 2000 年至 2009 年汤姆森路透市场扫描数据库的医疗补助部分。单变量和多变量分析评估了死亡、术后 30 天并发症风险、住院时间和总费用。我们共确定了 2321 名患者,其中 73.7%为白种人,57.8%为女性;Charlson 合并症评分<3(56.2%)且在低容量中心治疗(73.4%)。在所有患者中,26.3%的患者为非裔美国人,22.1%患有脑膜瘤。死亡率为 2.0%,平均住院时间(LOS)为 9 天,平均总费用为 42422 美元,22.5%的患者发生不良出院,总体 30 天并发症发生率为 23.4%。在多变量分析中,患有脑膜瘤的非裔美国患者发生 30 天并发症的可能性更高(p=0.05),并且与白人患者相比,他们的 LOS 显著更长(p<0.001),总费用更高(p<0.001)。术后并发症的存在使 LOS 增加一倍,总费用增加近一倍,而术后并发症的存在使这些结果增加两倍。非裔美国患者的术后并发症明显高于白种人。这种更高的并发症发生率似乎导致非裔美国患者的医疗保健利用增加,包括更长的 LOS 和更高的总费用。旨在减少非裔美国脑肿瘤患者并发症的干预措施可能有助于减少术后差异。