School of Medicine, Department of Surgery.
Department of Surgery, Division of Plastic Surgery, School of Medicine, University of California San Diego, La Jolla, CA.
J Craniofac Surg. 2024;35(5):1334-1337. doi: 10.1097/SCS.0000000000010162. Epub 2024 May 6.
Geospatial and socioeconomic health disparities are potential barriers to timely diagnosis and treatment of nonsyndromic craniosynostosis. This systematic review aims to assess published literature describing disparities in craniosynostosis care and to summarize the findings surrounding patient proximity to care centers and familial socioeconomic status as predictors of surgical management and outcomes. The data sources used include PubMed, MEDLINE, and Google Scholar. The Strengthening the Reporting of Observational Studies in Epidemiology checklist was used for appraisal of the quality of the studies included. Generally, the literature reviewed suggested that socioeconomic variables including race, insurance payor, and median zip code income quartile are predictors of suboptimal craniosynostosis surgical management outcomes including older age at time of surgery and more invasive surgical approach performed. The only geospatial data element assessed was the general region of the hospital where the patient was treated. The review highlighted various knowledge gaps within published literature describing health-related disparities in patients with craniosynostosis. There is a paucity of research assessing geospatial access to craniosynostosis care centers, suggesting that further research should be performed to evaluate this potential disparity. In addition, previous studies lack granularity when assessing socioeconomic factors and only one study accounted for suture fused, which is a potential confounding variable across the other published work. These considerations should be addressed in future studies addressing this topic. The limitations of this review include potential publication bias given that unpublished work was not included. An element of reviewer bias also exists considering only one reviewer screened the articles and extracted the data.
地理空间和社会经济健康差距可能是及时诊断和治疗非综合征性颅缝早闭的障碍。本系统评价旨在评估描述颅缝早闭护理差异的已发表文献,并总结围绕患者接近护理中心和家庭社会经济地位的发现,作为手术管理和结果的预测因素。使用的数据源包括 PubMed、MEDLINE 和 Google Scholar。使用观察性研究流行病学强化报告清单评估纳入研究的质量。一般来说,综述文献表明,社会经济变量,包括种族、保险支付者和中位数邮政编码收入四分位数,是预测颅缝早闭手术管理结果不佳的因素,包括手术时年龄较大和采用更具侵入性的手术方法。评估的唯一地理空间数据元素是患者接受治疗的医院的一般区域。该综述强调了描述颅缝早闭患者健康相关差异的已发表文献中的各种知识空白。评估颅缝早闭护理中心的地理空间可达性的研究很少,表明应该进一步研究评估这一潜在差异。此外,以前的研究在评估社会经济因素时缺乏粒度,只有一项研究考虑了融合的缝线,这是其他已发表工作中的一个潜在混杂变量。在解决这一主题的未来研究中,应考虑到这些因素。本综述的局限性包括由于未包括未发表的工作,可能存在发表偏倚。考虑到只有一名评审员筛选文章和提取数据,还存在评审员偏倚的因素。