Paynter Randi A, Bozinov Nina, Hawa Saadiya, Simard Julia F
Department of Epidemiology and Population Health, Stanford School of Medicine, Stanford, California, US.
Kootenai Clinic, Neurology, Kootenai Health, Coeur d'Alene, ID, USA.
Sci Rep. 2025 May 23;15(1):17882. doi: 10.1038/s41598-025-00726-8.
Disparities in outcomes have been reported in numerous neurologic diseases. Examining clinical decision-making patterns and behaviors can inform points of intervention to improve disease management and outcomes. This experimental vignette study sought to measure the effects of race (Black, White) and gender (female, male) on variation in clinical decision-making for remitting-relapsing multiple sclerosis (RRMS), primary progressive MS (PPMS), stroke, Parkinson disease, and epilepsy. A factorial survey study using five clinical vignettes was distributed to neurologists in the United States. Race and gender were randomly modified across all vignettes. Correct diagnoses for each vignette were the main outcome and additional outcomes included response time and planned next steps (as a proxy of certainty). 621 neurologists completed the study. Participants consistently diagnosed stroke correctly, independent of race/gender variant. However, we noted some variability for the other conditions. RRMS was correctly diagnosed among White female vignettes 89% of the time, compared to 81-82% for the other vignette types (p = 0.13). For PPMS vignettes, females were more likely to be correctly diagnosed than males, and White vignettes more likely to be correctly diagnosed than Black vignettes. We observed some variability in treatment initiation as the specified next step across vignettes, as well as response time. We found that diagnosis and certainty varied by race and gender. The extent to which frequency of correct diagnosis varied suggests uncertainty and reliance upon the epidemiologic knowledge base, particularly as the distribution of correct diagnoses corresponds with the evidence base.
在众多神经系统疾病中都有关于治疗结果差异的报道。研究临床决策模式和行为可以为改善疾病管理及治疗结果的干预点提供依据。这项实验性的病例 vignette 研究旨在衡量种族(黑人、白人)和性别(女性、男性)对复发缓解型多发性硬化症(RRMS)、原发性进展型多发性硬化症(PPMS)、中风、帕金森病和癫痫临床决策差异的影响。一项使用五个临床 vignette 的析因调查研究被分发给美国的神经科医生。在所有 vignette 中,种族和性别被随机修改。每个 vignette 的正确诊断是主要结果,其他结果包括反应时间和计划的下一步措施(作为确定性的替代指标)。621 名神经科医生完成了这项研究。参与者对中风的诊断始终正确,与种族/性别变体无关。然而,我们注意到其他疾病存在一些差异。白人女性 vignette 中 RRMS 的正确诊断率为 89%,而其他 vignette 类型的正确诊断率为 81 - 82%(p = 0.13)。对于 PPMS vignette,女性比男性更有可能被正确诊断,白人 vignette 比黑人 vignette 更有可能被正确诊断。我们观察到在作为 vignette 中指定的下一步措施的治疗启动以及反应时间方面存在一些差异。我们发现诊断和确定性因种族和性别而异。正确诊断频率的变化程度表明存在不确定性且依赖于流行病学知识库,特别是因为正确诊断的分布与证据库相对应。