Puri Dhruv, Cho Eric, Ahmadieh Kian, Garg Nishant, Delgado Cesar, Cedars Benjamin, Witthaus Michael, Pan Michael, Buckley Jill C
Department of Urology UC San Diego School of Medicine La Jolla California USA.
Kaiser Permanente, Redwood City Medical Center San Francisco California USA.
BJUI Compass. 2024 Nov 7;5(12):1255-1262. doi: 10.1002/bco2.450. eCollection 2024 Dec.
Ureteral stricture disease (UTSD) poses significant challenges in reconstructive urology, with recent advances highlighting disparities in healthcare outcomes based on race and ethnicity. This study investigates the impact of race and ethnicity on clinical outcomes following ureteral reconstruction.
We conducted a single-centre prospective analysis of 233 patients who underwent ureteral reconstruction for UTSD from 2014 to 2023. Patient demographics, clinical characteristics, surgical details and outcomes were collected. Patients were stratified by race (White vs. non-White) and ethnicity (Hispanic vs. non-Hispanic). Statistical analyses included Kruskal-Wallis, Mann-Whitney tests, ANOVA, Kaplan-Meier analysis and multivariate logistic regression.
Our cohort included 233 patients who underwent ureteroplasty with 108 (46.4%) non-White patients, and 71 (30.5%) were Hispanic. No significant differences were found in recurrence rates, complications, or stricture-free survival between racial and ethnic groups. Prior reconstructions were more prevalent among non-White patients (26.9% vs. 16.0%; = 0.043). Unadjusted and adjusted regressions showed significant associations between non-White race (unadjusted = 0.76, = 0.008; adjusted = 0.82, = 0.008) and Hispanic ethnicity (unadjusted = 0.70, = 0.025; adjusted = 0.79, = 0.020) with increased stricture lengths.
This study highlights that although recurrence and complication rates do not significantly differ by race or ethnicity, disparities exist in clinical presentations, with non-White and Hispanic patients presenting with longer stricture lengths and higher body mass index. These findings underscore the need for targeted interventions to address underlying disparities in healthcare delivery and access.
输尿管狭窄疾病(UTSD)在重建泌尿外科中带来了重大挑战,最近的进展凸显了基于种族和民族的医疗保健结果差异。本研究调查种族和民族对输尿管重建术后临床结果的影响。
我们对2014年至2023年因UTSD接受输尿管重建的233例患者进行了单中心前瞻性分析。收集了患者的人口统计学、临床特征、手术细节和结果。患者按种族(白人vs.非白人)和民族(西班牙裔vs.非西班牙裔)进行分层。统计分析包括Kruskal-Wallis检验、Mann-Whitney检验、方差分析、Kaplan-Meier分析和多变量逻辑回归。
我们的队列包括233例行输尿管成形术的患者,其中108例(46.4%)为非白人患者,71例(30.5%)为西班牙裔。种族和民族群体之间在复发率、并发症或无狭窄生存率方面未发现显著差异。先前的重建在非白人患者中更为普遍(26.9%对16.0%;P = 0.043)。未调整和调整后的回归显示,非白人种族(未调整:P = 0.76,P = 0.008;调整后:P = 0.82,P = 0.008)和西班牙裔民族(未调整:P = 0.70,P = 0.025;调整后:P = 0.79,P = 0.020)与狭窄长度增加之间存在显著关联。
本研究强调,尽管复发率和并发症率在种族或民族上没有显著差异,但临床表现存在差异,非白人和西班牙裔患者的狭窄长度更长,体重指数更高。这些发现强调了需要有针对性的干预措施来解决医疗服务提供和可及性方面的潜在差异。