Racial disparities in short-term spinal fusion outcomes across 4263 consecutive patients

Author:

Borja Austin J.1,Gallagher Ryan S.1,Karsalia Ritesh1,Chauhan Daksh1,Malhotra Emelia G.1,Punchak Maria A.1,Na Jianbo2,McClintock Scott D.3,Schuster James M.2,Malhotra Neil R.12

Affiliation:

1. Department of Neurosurgery, Perelman School of Medicine at the University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia;

2. McKenna EpiLog Fellowship in Population Health, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia;

3. West Chester University, The West Chester Statistical Institute and Department of Mathematics, West Chester, Pennsylvania

Abstract

OBJECTIVE Race plays a salient role in access to surgical care. However, few investigations have assessed the impact of race within surgical populations after care has been delivered. The objective of this study was to employ an exact matching protocol to a homogenous population of spine surgery patients in order to isolate the relationships between race and short-term postoperative outcomes. METHODS In total, 4263 consecutive patients who underwent single-level, posterior-only lumbar fusion at a single multihospital academic medical center were retrospectively enrolled. Of these patients, 3406 patients self-identified as White and 857 patients self-identified as non-White. Outcomes were initially compared across all patients via logistic regression. Subsequently, White patients and non-White patients were exactly matched on the basis of key demographic and health characteristics (1520 matched patients). Outcome disparities were evaluated between the exact-matched cohorts. Primary outcomes were readmissions, emergency department (ED) visits, reoperations, mortality, intraoperative complications, and discharge disposition. RESULTS Before matching, non-White patients were less likely to be discharged home and more likely to be readmitted, evaluated in the ED, and undergo reoperation. After matching, non-White patients experienced higher rates of nonhome discharge, readmissions, and ED visits. Non-White patients did not have more surgical complications either before or after matching. CONCLUSIONS Between otherwise similar cohorts of spinal fusion cases, non-White patients experienced unfavorable discharge disposition and higher risk of multiple adverse postoperative outcomes. However, these findings were not accounted for by differences in surgical complications, suggesting that structural factors underlie the observed disparities.

Publisher

Journal of Neurosurgery Publishing Group (JNSPG)

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5. Effect of race and socioeconomic status on surgical margins and biochemical outcomes in an equal-access health care setting: results from the Shared Equal Access Regional Cancer Hospital (SEARCH) database;Chu DI,2012

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