Racial and ethnic disparities in reception of muscle flap closure during oncologic spinal surgery

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Abstract

Background

Racial disparities persist in surgical outcomes after spine surgery for primary and metastatic cancers. Muscle flap closure of spinal defects after oncologic resection has been shown to reduce wound complication rate with favorable cost-effectiveness. It is currently unknown whether racial disparities may affect the reception of this treatment.

Methods

Spinal surgery procedures for tumor resection and subsequent reconstruction were identified in the 2011–2022 National Surgical Quality Improvement Program databases. Cases were propensity score matched for covariates like age, comorbidities, number of vertebral levels reconstructed, and length of stay to isolate the predictive impact of race on reception of muscle flap closure (p < 0.05).

Results

A total of 9467 patients who underwent oncologic spine surgery and had known race and ethnicity were identified in the final cohort. Two hundred thirty-two (2.5%) cases included muscle flap closure during the index surgery. After matching (n = 4196), minority race/ethnicity was associated with lower rates of muscle flap closure (2.2%) than non-Hispanic White race/ethnicity (3.8%) (p = 0.0037). Upon weighted univariate logistic regression, minority racial and ethnic identification also predicted lower likelihood of muscle flap closure (OR: 0.57, 95% CI: 0.52–0.63, p < 0.001). Among patients who received muscle flap closure, the overall rate of all major or minor thirty-day postoperative complications was not different depending on race and ethnicity (p > 0.05).

Conclusion

There are evident racial disparities in the reception of muscle flap closure after oncologic spine surgery. Further work may investigate the role of intersecting socioeconomic factors like insurance status and hospital characteristics.

Lay summary

Muscle flap closure is a surgical technique within plastic surgery that has been associated with lower rates of complications after spine surgery to remove tumors. Our study shows that minority racial and ethnic groups are less likely on average to receive muscle flap closure.

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脊柱肿瘤手术中接受肌肉瓣闭合的种族和民族差异
背景原发性和转移性癌症脊柱手术后的治疗效果仍存在种族差异。肿瘤切除术后脊柱缺损的肌肉瓣闭合已被证明可降低伤口并发症的发生率,并具有良好的成本效益。方法在 2011-2022 年国家手术质量改进计划数据库中确定了肿瘤切除和后续重建的脊柱手术程序。对病例的年龄、合并症、重建椎体水平数和住院时间等协变量进行倾向评分匹配,以分离出种族对接受肌肉瓣闭合术的预测影响(p < 0.05)。结果在最终队列中确定了9467名接受脊柱肿瘤手术且已知种族和民族的患者。其中 232 例(2.5%)在索引手术中包括肌肉瓣闭合。匹配后(n = 4196),少数民族种族/族裔的肌肉瓣闭合率(2.2%)低于非西班牙裔白人种族/族裔的肌肉瓣闭合率(3.8%)(p = 0.0037)。在加权单变量逻辑回归中,少数种族和民族身份也预示着较低的肌皮瓣关闭可能性(OR:0.57,95% CI:0.52-0.63,p <0.001)。在接受肌皮瓣关闭术的患者中,术后三十天所有主要或次要并发症的总发生率并不因种族和民族而异(p >0.05)。进一步的工作可能会调查保险状况和医院特点等交叉社会经济因素的作用。摘要肌肉瓣闭合术是整形外科的一种手术技术,与脊柱手术切除肿瘤后并发症发生率较低有关。我们的研究表明,少数种族和民族群体平均接受肌瓣关闭术的可能性较低。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
3.10
自引率
11.10%
发文量
578
审稿时长
3.5 months
期刊介绍: JPRAS An International Journal of Surgical Reconstruction is one of the world''s leading international journals, covering all the reconstructive and aesthetic aspects of plastic surgery. The journal presents the latest surgical procedures with audit and outcome studies of new and established techniques in plastic surgery including: cleft lip and palate and other heads and neck surgery, hand surgery, lower limb trauma, burns, skin cancer, breast surgery and aesthetic surgery.
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