Department of Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery, MedStar Georgetown University Hospital, Washington, District of Columbia.
Division of Breast Surgery, MedStar Georgetown University Hospital, Washington, District of Columbia.
Breast J. 2020 Sep;26(9):1702-1711. doi: 10.1111/tbj.13953. Epub 2020 Jul 12.
Increased time to mastectomy (TTM) has significant implications for mortality, well-being, and satisfaction. However, certain populations are subject to disparities that increase TTM. This study examines vulnerable populations and the patient-, disease-, provider-, and system-level factors related to treatment delays. Patients undergoing mastectomy for breast cancer from 2014 to 2018 across 8 hospitals in a single health care system were retrospectively reviewed. Demographics, disease characteristics, and provider- and system-level information were collected. Time from biopsy-proven diagnosis to mastectomy was calculated. Univariate analysis identified variables for inclusion in the multivariable model. One thousand, three hundred thirty patients met inclusion. Median TTM was 55.0 days. Factors from all levels-patient, disease, provider, and systemic-were significantly related to disparities. African-American patients had 11.6% longer TTM compared to white patients (69.0 vs 56.0 days, P < .0001). TTM was 15.5% longer for low-income patients when compared to high-income patients (65.0 vs 49.0 days, P = .0014). Preoperative plastic surgery visits led to 19.3% longer TTM (P = .0012); oncologic appointments for neo-adjuvant chemotherapy led to a 231.0% increase (P < .0001). Average time from last neo-adjuvant treatment to mastectomy was 44.4 days (SD 26.5); average TTM from diagnosis for patients not receiving neo-adjuvant chemotherapy was 58.5 days (SD 13.3). Patients with Medicaid waited 14.5% longer compared to patients with commercial insurance (94.0 vs 62.0 days, P = .0005). In our review of care across a large health care system, we identified multiple levels contributing to disparities in TTM. Identification of these disparities offers valuable insight into process improvement and intervention.
手术时间延长(TTM)对死亡率、幸福感和满意度有重大影响。然而,某些人群的 TTM 延长存在差异。本研究探讨了弱势群体以及与治疗延迟相关的患者、疾病、提供者和系统层面的因素。对单一医疗保健系统的 8 家医院 2014 年至 2018 年间接受乳腺癌乳房切除术的患者进行了回顾性分析。收集了人口统计学、疾病特征以及提供者和系统层面的信息。从活检确诊到乳房切除术的时间计算为 TTM。单变量分析确定了纳入多变量模型的变量。1330 名患者符合纳入标准。中位数 TTM 为 55.0 天。来自患者、疾病、提供者和系统各个层面的因素与差异显著相关。与白人患者相比,非裔美国患者 TTM 延长了 11.6%(69.0 天比 56.0 天,P<0.0001)。与高收入患者相比,低收入患者 TTM 延长了 15.5%(65.0 天比 49.0 天,P=0.0014)。术前整形手术预约导致 TTM 延长 19.3%(P=0.0012);新辅助化疗的肿瘤学预约导致 TTM 增加了 231.0%(P<0.0001)。从最后一次新辅助治疗到乳房切除术的平均时间为 44.4 天(标准差 26.5);未接受新辅助化疗的患者从诊断到 TTM 的平均时间为 58.5 天(标准差 13.3)。与有商业保险的患者相比,拥有医疗补助的患者等待时间延长了 14.5%(94.0 天比 62.0 天,P=0.0005)。在我们对大型医疗保健系统护理的回顾中,我们发现了导致 TTM 差异的多个层面。对这些差异的识别为改进流程和干预措施提供了有价值的见解。