Abstract
AbstractBackgroundEndometriosis is a chronic disease with a long time to diagnosis and several known comorbidities that requires a range of treatments including of pain management and hormone-based medications. Racial disparities specific to endometriosis treatments are unknown.ObjectiveWe aim to investigate differences in patterns of drug prescriptions specific to endometriosis management in Black and White patients prior to diagnosis and after diagnosis of endometriosis and compare these differences to racial disparities established in the general population.Study DesignWe conduct a retrospective cohort study using observational health data from the IBM MarketScan® Multi-state Medicaid dataset. We identify a cohort of endometriosis patients consisting of women between the ages of 15 and 49 with an endometriosis-related surgical procedure and a diagnosis code for endometriosis within 30 days of this procedure. Cohort is further restricted to patients with at least 3 years of continuous observation prior to diagnosis.We identify a non-endometriosis cohort of women between the ages of 15 and 49 with no endometriosis diagnosis and at least 1 year of continuous observation. We compare prevalence of prescriptions across selected drug classes for Black vs. White endometriosis patients. We further examine prevalence differences in the non-endometriosis cohort and prevalence differences pre- and post-diagnosis in the endometriosis cohort.ResultsThe endometriosis cohort comprised 16,372 endometriosis patients (23.3% Black, 66.0% White). Of the 28 drug classes examined, 17 were prescribed significantly less in Black patients compared to 21 in non-endometriosis cohort (n=3,663,904), and 4 were prescribed significantly more in Black patients compared to 6 in the non-endometriosis cohort. Of the 17 drugs prescribed more often in White patients, 16 have larger disparities pre-diagnosis than post-diagnosis.ConclusionsOur analysis identified significant differences in medication prescriptions between White and Black patients with endometriosis, notably in hormonal treatments, pain management, and treatments for common endometriosis co-morbidities. Racial disparities in drug prescriptions are well established in healthcare, and better understanding these disparities in the specific context of chronic reproductive conditions and chronic pain is important for increasing equity in drug prescription practices.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory