Nourmahnad Anahita, Purrinos Julian A, Grozovsky Renata, Richardson Angela M, Levine Corinna G
Department of Otolaryngology-Head and Neck Surgery, University of Miami, Miller School of Medicine, Miami, Florida, United States.
Department of Neurosurgery, Indiana University School of Medicine, Indianapolis, Indiana, United States.
J Neurol Surg B Skull Base. 2024 Jan 29;85(Suppl 2):e145-e152. doi: 10.1055/s-0043-1778646. eCollection 2024 Oct.
Social determinants of health (SDOH) are associated with differential outcomes after pituitary tumor treatment. However, the specific impact of SDOH is not well characterized. One reason may be the lack of collection and reporting of sociodemographic variables in the literature. This study aims to evaluate the frequency of reporting and distribution of participants' sex, race, ethnicity, income, and education level within pituitary surgery literature. We will compare the reported clinical research population demographics to the 2020 U.S. census. A systematic review was performed by searching PubMed, Cochrane, and Embase databases for pituitary surgery clinical research published between July 1, 2021 to June 30, 2022. We excluded studies that lacked a comparison group, were not original research (i.e., systematic reviews, meta-analysis), or included national databases and registry data. The final analysis included 92 studies. A total of 99% of studies collected data on subject sex. On average 49% (range: 14-100%) of study populations were male. Only 4% ( = 4) studies included racial demographic data. Two studies included information on participants' ethnicity and two included education background. No studies included income or insurance data. Four U.S. studies included demographic distribution, and the reported race and ethnicity percentages are similar to the U.S. 2020 census distribution. Most clinical pituitary research collects and reports data on participant sex. However, very few studies collect and report data on other sociodemographic variables that can play a role in outcomes. The lack of sociodemographic information in clinical research literature makes it difficult to determine the role of SDOH on pituitary surgery outcomes.
健康的社会决定因素(SDOH)与垂体瘤治疗后的不同结果相关。然而,SDOH的具体影响尚未得到充分描述。一个原因可能是文献中缺乏社会人口统计学变量的收集和报告。本研究旨在评估垂体手术文献中参与者性别、种族、民族、收入和教育水平的报告频率及分布情况。我们将把报告的临床研究人群人口统计学数据与2020年美国人口普查数据进行比较。
通过检索PubMed、Cochrane和Embase数据库,对2021年7月1日至2022年6月30日发表的垂体手术临床研究进行了系统综述。我们排除了缺乏对照组、非原创研究(即系统综述、荟萃分析)或包含国家数据库和登记数据的研究。
最终分析纳入了92项研究。总共99%的研究收集了受试者性别的数据。研究人群中男性平均占49%(范围:14 - 100%)。只有4%(n = 4)的研究纳入了种族人口统计学数据。两项研究包含了参与者民族的信息,两项包含了教育背景信息。没有研究纳入收入或保险数据。四项美国研究纳入了人口统计学分布,报告的种族和民族百分比与2020年美国人口普查分布相似。
大多数垂体临床研究收集并报告了参与者性别的数据。然而,很少有研究收集并报告其他可能影响结果的社会人口统计学变量的数据。临床研究文献中缺乏社会人口统计学信息,使得难以确定SDOH对垂体手术结果的作用。