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Medicina (Kaunas). 2024 Jul 19;60(7):1169. doi: 10.3390/medicina60071169.
: Breast reconstruction (BR) following mastectomy is a well-established beneficial medical intervention for patient physical and psychological well-being. Previous studies have emphasized BR as the gold standard of care for breast cancer patients requiring surgery. Multiple policies have improved BR access, but there remain social, economic, and geographical barriers to receiving reconstruction. Threats to equitable healthcare for all breast cancer patients in America persist despite growing awareness and efforts to negate these disparities. While race/ethnicity has been correlated with differences in BR rates and outcomes, ongoing research outlines a multitude of issues underlying this variance. Understanding the current and continuous barriers will help to address and overcome gaps in access. : A systematic review assessing three reference databases (PubMed, Web of Science, and Ovid Medline) was carried out in accordance with PRISMA 2020 guidelines. A keyword search was conducted on 3 February 2024, specifying results between 2004 and 2024. Studies were included based on content, peer-reviewed status, and publication type. Two independent reviewers screened results based on title/abstract appropriateness and relevance. Data were extracted, cached in an online reference collection, and input into a cloud-based database for analysis. : In total, 1756 references were populated from all databases (PubMed = 829, Ovid Medline = 594, and Web of Science = 333), and 461 duplicate records were removed, along with 1147 results deemed ineligible by study criteria. Then, 45 international or non-English results were excluded. The screening sample consisted of 103 publications. After screening, the systematic review produced 70 studies with satisfactory relevance to our study focus. : Federal mandates have improved access to women undergoing postmastectomy BR, particularly for younger, White, privately insured, urban-located patients. Recently published studies had a stronger focus on disparities, particularly among races, and show continued disadvantages for minorities, lower-income, rural-community, and public insurance payers. The research remains limited beyond commonly reported metrics of disparity and lacks examination of additional contributing factors. Future investigations should elucidate the effect of these factors and propose measures to eliminate barriers to access to BR for all patients.
乳房重建(BR)是一种成熟的、有益的医学干预手段,能够改善患者的身心健康。多项政策提高了 BR 的可及性,但仍存在社会、经济和地域障碍,影响患者接受重建治疗。尽管人们越来越意识到并努力消除这些差异,但在美国,所有乳腺癌患者公平获得医疗保健的威胁仍然存在。尽管种族/民族与 BR 率和结果存在差异相关,但正在进行的研究概述了导致这种差异的多种问题。了解当前和持续存在的障碍将有助于解决和克服获得 BR 的差距。
我们按照 PRISMA 2020 指南对三个参考数据库(PubMed、Web of Science 和 Ovid Medline)进行了系统评价。2024 年 2 月 3 日进行了关键字搜索,限定了 2004 年至 2024 年的结果。根据内容、同行评议状态和出版类型纳入研究。两名独立审查员根据标题/摘要的适当性和相关性筛选结果。提取数据,缓存到在线参考收藏夹中,并输入云数据库进行分析。
从所有数据库(PubMed=829、Ovid Medline=594 和 Web of Science=333)共收录了 1756 条参考文献,去除了 461 条重复记录和 1147 条不符合研究标准的记录,然后排除了 45 条国际或非英语记录。筛选样本由 103 篇出版物组成。筛选后,系统评价产生了 70 项与我们研究重点密切相关的研究。
联邦指令提高了接受乳房切除术 BR 的女性的可及性,尤其是年轻、白人、私人保险、城市地区的患者。最近发表的研究更加关注差异,特别是种族差异,并显示少数民族、低收入、农村社区和公共保险支付者持续处于劣势地位。除了通常报告的差异衡量标准之外,研究仍然有限,并且缺乏对其他相关因素的检查。未来的研究应阐明这些因素的影响,并提出消除所有患者获得 BR 障碍的措施。