Department of Anesthesiology and Pain Medicine, Nationwide Children's Hospital, Columbus, Ohio.
Department of Pediatric Surgery, Nationwide Children's Hospital, Columbus, Ohio.
J Surg Res. 2021 Aug;264:435-443. doi: 10.1016/j.jss.2021.02.036. Epub 2021 Apr 10.
We sought to investigate the risk of pediatric surgical mortality associated with the combined effects of key preoperative comorbidities and race.
We performed a retrospective study that included infants who underwent inpatient surgical procedures between 2012 and 2017 and were entered into the NSQIP-P registry. We assessed additive moderation by estimating the proportion of mortality risk attributable to the combined effects of race and the presence of a preoperative comorbidity (attributable proportion [AP]).
The study group was comprised of 58466 surgical cases, of whom 15711(26.9%) were neonates and 42755(73.1%) older infants. Among neonates, a history of prematurity carried a poorer prognosis in black babies than their white peers (OR:1.53, 95%CI:1.20,1.95). Additionally, there was evidence of additive moderation by race on the association between prematurity and postoperative mortality (AP: 23.9%; 95%CI: 3.8,43.9, P value = 0.020). In older infants, presence of preoperative sepsis carried almost two times higher risk of mortality for black patients than their white counterparts (OR:1.81; 95%CI:1.21,2.73). This explained 38.4% of mortality cases in black patients with preoperative sepsis (95%CI:14.0,62.7; P = 0.002). A history of prematurity also carried a greater risk of mortality in older infants of black race (OR:1.69; 95%CI: 1.27, 2.24), accounting for 24.2% of mortality cases (AP:24.2%; 95%CI:0.90, 47.5, P = 0.041).
We quantified the surgical burden of mortality resulting from the differential impact of key comorbidities on black neonates and infants. Our data suggest that race-specific interventions to mitigate the incidence of the identified comorbidities could narrow the racial disparities in post surgical mortality.
我们旨在研究与关键术前合并症和种族的综合影响相关的儿科手术死亡率风险。
我们进行了一项回顾性研究,纳入了 2012 年至 2017 年间接受住院手术并纳入 NSQIP-P 登记处的婴儿。我们通过估计种族和术前合并症并存对死亡率风险的归因比例(归因比例 [AP])来评估附加调节作用。
研究组共包括 58466 例手术病例,其中 15711 例(26.9%)为新生儿,42755 例(73.1%)为较大婴儿。在新生儿中,与白人婴儿相比,早产儿病史黑人婴儿预后较差(OR:1.53,95%CI:1.20,1.95)。此外,种族对早产儿与术后死亡率之间的关联存在附加调节作用(AP:23.9%;95%CI:3.8,43.9,P 值=0.020)。在较大婴儿中,术前脓毒症的存在使黑人患者的死亡率风险几乎高出白人患者两倍(OR:1.81;95%CI:1.21,2.73)。这解释了黑人患者术前脓毒症死亡病例的 38.4%(95%CI:14.0,62.7;P=0.002)。在黑人较大婴儿中,早产儿病史也具有更高的死亡率风险(OR:1.69;95%CI:1.27,2.24),占死亡病例的 24.2%(AP:24.2%;95%CI:0.90,47.5,P=0.041)。
我们量化了由关键合并症对黑人新生儿和婴儿的不同影响导致的死亡率手术负担。我们的数据表明,针对特定种族的干预措施可以减轻所确定合并症的发生率,从而缩小手术后死亡率的种族差异。