Departments of1Neurological Surgery.
2School of Medicine, New York Medical College, Valhalla, New York.
J Neurosurg. 2023 Aug 11;140(3):712-723. doi: 10.3171/2023.6.JNS23570. Print 2024 Mar 1.
Socioeconomic status (SES) is known to affect presentations and outcomes in pituitary neuroendocrine tumor resections, but there is a paucity of literature examining its impact specifically on patients with prolactinomas, who may be treated medically or surgically. The authors sought to determine whether SES was associated with differences in treatment choice or outcomes for prolactinoma patients.
The authors retrospectively reviewed patient records at a high-volume academic pituitary center for prolactinoma diagnoses. Patients were split into medically and surgically treated cohorts. Race, ethnicity, insurance status, primary care physician (PCP) status, and zip code-based income data were collected and examined as socioeconomic covariates. Outcomes of interest included pretreatment likelihood of surgical cure, medical versus surgical treatment allocation, and posttreatment remission rates.
The authors analyzed 568 prolactinoma patients (351 medically treated and 217 surgically treated). Patients receiving surgery were more likely to have Medicaid or private insurance (p < 0.001) and have lower incomes (p < 0.001) than medically treated patients. Lower-income surgical patients were more likely to require surgical intervention for an indication such as tumor decompression than higher-income patients (p = 0.023). Surgical patients with a PCP had a higher estimated likelihood of surgical cure (p = 0.008), while no SES-based differences in surgical remission likelihood existed in the medical cohort. After surgery, surgical patients who achieved remission had significantly higher income than those who did not (p < 0.001). Other SES factors were not associated with surgical remission, and among medically treated patients, remission rates were not affected by any SES factor. Income was inversely related to prolactinoma size in both cohorts (surgical, p < 0.001; medical, p = 0.005) but was associated more prominently in surgical patients (surgical, -0.65 mm per $10,000; medical, -0.37 mm per $10,000).
While surgical prolactinoma patients were prone to income and PCP-related disparities, no SES disparities were found among medically treated patients. Income had a more pronounced association with tumor size in the surgical cohort and likely contributed to the increased need for surgical intervention seen in low-income surgical patients. Addressing socioeconomic healthcare disparities is needed among surgical prolactinoma patients to increase rates of early presentation and improve the outcomes of low-SES populations.
社会经济地位(SES)已知会影响垂体神经内分泌肿瘤切除术的表现和结果,但关于 SES 对催乳素瘤患者的影响的文献很少,而催乳素瘤患者可能接受药物或手术治疗。作者试图确定 SES 是否与催乳素瘤患者的治疗选择或结果存在差异。
作者回顾性分析了一家高容量学术垂体中心的催乳素瘤患者的病历。患者分为药物治疗和手术治疗两组。收集种族、民族、保险状况、初级保健医生(PCP)状况和邮政编码收入数据,并作为社会经济协变量进行检查。感兴趣的结果包括治疗前手术治愈的可能性、药物与手术治疗的分配以及治疗后的缓解率。
作者分析了 568 例催乳素瘤患者(351 例药物治疗和 217 例手术治疗)。接受手术的患者更有可能拥有医疗补助或私人保险(p < 0.001)和较低的收入(p < 0.001),而非药物治疗的患者。收入较低的手术患者更有可能因肿瘤减压等指征需要手术干预,而收入较高的患者则不需要(p = 0.023)。有 PCP 的手术患者手术治愈的可能性更高(p = 0.008),而在药物治疗组中,SES 对手术缓解可能性没有差异。手术后,手术缓解的患者收入明显高于未缓解的患者(p < 0.001)。其他 SES 因素与手术缓解无关,而在药物治疗的患者中,SES 因素与缓解率无关。收入与两个队列中的催乳素瘤大小呈负相关(手术,p < 0.001;药物,p = 0.005),但在手术患者中更为显著(手术,每 10,000 美元下降 0.65 毫米;药物,每 10,000 美元下降 0.37 毫米)。
尽管手术催乳素瘤患者容易出现与收入和 PCP 相关的差异,但药物治疗的患者中没有发现 SES 差异。收入与手术组中的肿瘤大小有更明显的关联,可能导致低收入手术患者需要更多的手术干预。需要解决手术催乳素瘤患者的社会经济医疗保健差异,以提高低收入人群的早期就诊率并改善低 SES 人群的结局。