Bauder Andrew R, Gross Cary P, Killelea Brigid K, Butler Paris D, Kovach Stephen J, Fox Justin P
From the *Division of Plastic Surgery, Department of Surgery, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, PA; †Robert Wood Johnson Foundation Clinical Scholars Program, Division of General Internal Medicine, Cancer Outcomes Policy and Effectiveness Research (COPPER) Center, Yale Comprehensive Cancer Center and Yale School of Medicine; Division of Chronic Disease Epidemiology, Yale School of Public Health; and ‡Department of Surgery, Cancer Outcomes, Public Policy and Effectiveness Research (COPPER) Center, Yale Cancer Center and Yale University School of Medicine; Center for Outcomes Research and Evaluation, Yale-New Haven Hospital, New Haven, CT.
Ann Plast Surg. 2017 Mar;78(3):324-329. doi: 10.1097/SAP.0000000000000849.
Despite a national health care policy requiring payers to cover breast reconstruction, rates of postmastectomy reconstruction are low, particularly among minority populations. We conducted this study to determine if geographic access to a plastic surgeon impacts breast reconstruction rates.
Using 2010 inpatient and ambulatory surgery data from 10 states, we identified adult women who underwent mastectomy for breast cancer. Data were aggregated to the health service area (HSA) level and hierarchical generalized linear models were used to risk-standardize breast reconstruction rates (RSRR) across HSAs. The relationship between an HSA's RSRR and plastic surgeon density (surgeons/100,000 population) was quantified using correlation coefficients.
The final cohort included 22,997 patients across 134 HSAs. There was substantial variation in plastic surgeon density (median, 1.4 surgeons/100,000; interquartile range, [0.0-2.6]/100,000) and the use of breast reconstruction (median RSRR, 43.0%; interquartile range, [29.9%-62.8%]) across HSAs. Higher plastic surgeon density was positively correlated with breast reconstruction rates (correlation coefficient = 0.66, P < 0.001) and inversely related to time between mastectomy and reconstruction (correlation coefficient = -0.19, P < 0.001). Non-white and publicly insured women were least likely to undergo breast reconstruction overall. Among privately insured patients, racial disparities were noted in high surgeon density areas (white = 79.0% vs. non-white = 63.3%; P < 0.001) but not in low surgeon density areas (34.4% vs 36.5%; P = 0.70).
The lack of geographic access to a plastic surgeon serves as a barrier to breast reconstruction and may compound disparities in care associated with race and insurance status. Future efforts to improve equitable access should consider strategies to ensure access to appropriate clinical expertise.
尽管国家医疗保健政策要求支付方为乳房重建提供保险,但乳房切除术后重建的比例较低,尤其是在少数族裔人群中。我们开展这项研究以确定获取整形外科医生的地理便利性是否会影响乳房重建率。
利用来自10个州的2010年住院和门诊手术数据,我们确定了因乳腺癌接受乳房切除术的成年女性。数据汇总到卫生服务区(HSA)层面,并使用分层广义线性模型对各卫生服务区的乳房重建率(RSRR)进行风险标准化。使用相关系数对卫生服务区的RSRR与整形外科医生密度(每10万人口中的医生数)之间的关系进行量化。
最终队列包括来自134个卫生服务区的22997名患者。各卫生服务区的整形外科医生密度(中位数为每10万人口中有1.4名医生;四分位间距为[0.0 - 2.6]/10万)和乳房重建的使用情况(RSRR中位数为43.0%;四分位间距为[29.9% - 62.8%])存在很大差异。较高的整形外科医生密度与乳房重建率呈正相关(相关系数 = 0.66,P < 0.001),与乳房切除术后至重建的时间呈负相关(相关系数 = -0.19,P < 0.001)。总体而言,非白人女性和参加公共保险的女性接受乳房重建的可能性最小。在私人保险患者中,在整形外科医生密度高的地区存在种族差异(白人 = 79.0% 对非白人 = 63.3%;P < 0.001),但在整形外科医生密度低的地区不存在(34.4% 对36.5%;P = 0.70)。
在地理上难以获取整形外科医生是乳房重建的一个障碍,并且可能加剧与种族和保险状况相关的护理差异。未来改善公平获取的努力应考虑采取策略以确保能够获得适当的临床专业知识。