Hauser Blake M, Gupta Saksham, Xu Edward, Wu Kyle, Bernstock Joshua D, Chua Melissa, Khawaja Ayaz M, Smith Timothy R, Dunn Ian F, Bergmark Regan W, Bi Wenya Linda
Center for Skull Base and Pituitary Surgery, Department of Neurosurgery, Brigham and Women's Hospital, Harvard Medical School, 60 Fenwood Road, Boston, MA, 02115, USA.
Computational Neurosurgical Outcomes Center, Department of Neurosurgery, Brigham and Women's Hospital, Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA, 02115, USA.
J Neurooncol. 2020 Aug;149(1):131-140. doi: 10.1007/s11060-020-03581-x. Epub 2020 Jul 11.
Surgical outcomes and healthcare utilization have been shown to vary based on patient insurance status. We analyzed whether patients' insurance affects case urgency for and readmission after craniotomy for meningioma resection, using benign meningioma as a model system to minimize confounding from the disease-related characteristics of other neurosurgical pathologies.
We analyzed 90-day readmission for patients who underwent resection of a benign meningioma in the Nationwide Readmission Database from 2014-2015.
A total of 9783 meningioma patients with private insurance (46%), Medicare (39%), Medicaid (10%), self-pay (2%), or another scheme (3%) were analyzed. 72% of all cases were elective; with 78% of cases in privately insured patients being elective compared to 71% of Medicare (p > 0.05), 59% of Medicaid patients (OR 2.3, p < 0.001), and 49% of self-pay patients (OR 3.4, p < 0.001). Medicare (OR 1.5, p = 0.002) and Medicaid (OR 1.4, p = 0.035) were both associated with higher likelihood of 90-day readmission compared to private insurance. In comparison, 30-day analyses did not unveil this discrepancy between Medicaid and privately insured, highlighting the merit for longer-term outcomes analyses in value-based care. Patients readmitted within 30 days versus those with later readmissions possessed different characteristics.
Compared to patients with private insurance coverage, Medicaid and self-pay patients were significantly more likely to undergo non-elective resection of benign meningioma. Medicaid and Medicare insurance were associated with a higher likelihood of 90-day readmission; only Medicare was significant at 30 days. Both 30 and 90-day outcomes merit consideration given differences in readmitted populations.
手术结果和医疗保健利用情况已显示会因患者保险状况而异。我们以良性脑膜瘤为模型系统,分析患者的保险是否会影响脑膜瘤切除术后颅骨切开术的病例紧急程度和再入院情况,以尽量减少其他神经外科疾病相关特征造成的混杂影响。
我们分析了2014年至2015年全国再入院数据库中接受良性脑膜瘤切除术患者的90天再入院情况。
共分析了9783例患有私人保险(46%)、医疗保险(39%)、医疗补助(10%)、自费(2%)或其他保险计划(3%)的脑膜瘤患者。所有病例中有72%为择期手术;私人保险患者中有78%的病例为择期手术,相比之下,医疗保险患者为71%(p>0.05),医疗补助患者为59%(比值比2.3,p<0.001),自费患者为49%(比值比3.4,p<0.001)。与私人保险相比,医疗保险(比值比1.5,p = 0.002)和医疗补助(比值比1.4,p = 0.035)与90天再入院的可能性更高均相关。相比之下,30天分析未揭示医疗补助和私人保险患者之间的这种差异,突出了在基于价值的医疗中进行长期结果分析的价值。30天内再入院的患者与较晚再入院的患者具有不同特征。
与拥有私人保险的患者相比,医疗补助和自费患者进行良性脑膜瘤非择期切除的可能性显著更高。医疗补助和医疗保险与90天再入院的可能性更高相关;只有医疗保险在30天时具有显著性。鉴于再入院人群的差异,30天和90天的结果均值得考虑。