Patient-Physician Racial Concordance Increases Likelihood of Total Knee Arthroplasty Recommendation.

IF 3.4 2区 医学 Q1 ORTHOPEDICS Journal of Arthroplasty Pub Date : 2024-11-15 DOI:10.1016/j.arth.2024.11.019
Linda I Suleiman, Rachel Bergman, Manasa Pagadala, T Jacob Selph, Patricia Franklin, Adam I Edelstein
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Abstract

Background: Minority patients have been shown to underutilize total knee arthroplasty (TKA) compared to non-Hispanic White (NHW) patients. Specific drivers of this underutilization have not been identified. We sought to determine if racial concordance between patient and physician is associated with the surgeon's likelihood to recommend TKA.

Methods: There were 402 patients who presented for management of knee osteoarthritis to the clinics of four fellowship-trained arthroplasty surgeons at a single academic center. We recorded the patient and surgeon's race/ethnicity as well as the physician-recommended treatment. Patient clinical data was input to the American Academy of Orthopaedic Surgeons (AAOS) Appropriate Use Criteria (AUC) website to generate a guideline-based procedure recommendation for TKA. Patients who were not appropriate for TKA based on AAOS guidelines were excluded from analyses to minimize selection bias. Chi-square and multivariable regression analyses evaluated the relationship between TKA recommendation by surgeon and physician-patient racial concordance.

Results: Patients in this cohort who experienced racial concordance with their surgeon were more likely to receive a recommendation for TKA than patients who experienced racial discordance. Black patients who received racially concordant care were more likely to be offered surgery compared to those who received racially discordant care (55.1 versus 23.0%, P = 0.0001). The same effect was not observed in NHW patients, where there was no significant difference in surgery offers between patients who received concordant versus discordant care (P = 0.18). Multivariable analyses were also conducted to test factors associated with TKA recommendations. Racial concordance was found to be an independent predictor of TKA recommendation while controlling for patient factors and individual differences by the surgeon.

Conclusion: Patients receiving racially concordant care in this cohort were more likely to be offered TKA, and the effect of racial concordance on TKA recommendation was greater among Black patients. These findings provide insight into possible drivers of TKA underutilization among minority groups.

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患者与医生的种族一致性会增加全膝关节置换术的推荐几率。
背景:与非西班牙裔白人(NHW)患者相比,少数族裔患者对全膝关节置换术(TKA)的利用率较低。造成这种利用率不足的具体原因尚未确定。我们试图确定患者和医生之间的种族一致性是否与外科医生推荐 TKA 的可能性有关:在一个学术中心的四名接受过研究员培训的关节置换外科医生的诊所中,有 402 名患者前来接受膝关节骨性关节炎的治疗。我们记录了患者和外科医生的种族/族裔以及医生推荐的治疗方法。患者的临床数据被输入到美国矫形外科医师学会(AAOS)的适当使用标准(AUC)网站,以生成基于指南的 TKA 手术建议。分析中排除了根据 AAOS 指南不适合接受 TKA 的患者,以尽量减少选择偏差。卡方和多变量回归分析评估了外科医生推荐的TKA与医生-患者种族一致性之间的关系:结果:与种族不一致的患者相比,与外科医生种族一致的患者更有可能获得 TKA 建议。与接受种族不一致治疗的患者相比,接受种族一致治疗的黑人患者更有可能获得手术治疗(55.1% 对 23.0%,P = 0.0001)。在非华裔患者中没有观察到同样的效应,接受一致护理与不一致护理的患者在手术机会上没有显著差异(P = 0.18)。我们还进行了多变量分析,以检验与 TKA 建议相关的因素。在控制了患者因素和外科医生个体差异的情况下,发现种族一致性是 TKA 建议的独立预测因素:结论:在该队列中,接受种族一致治疗的患者更有可能获得 TKA,而种族一致对 TKA 推荐的影响在黑人患者中更大。这些发现让我们了解到少数群体中TKA使用不足的可能原因。
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来源期刊
Journal of Arthroplasty
Journal of Arthroplasty 医学-整形外科
CiteScore
7.00
自引率
20.00%
发文量
734
审稿时长
48 days
期刊介绍: The Journal of Arthroplasty brings together the clinical and scientific foundations for joint replacement. This peer-reviewed journal publishes original research and manuscripts of the highest quality from all areas relating to joint replacement or the treatment of its complications, including those dealing with clinical series and experience, prosthetic design, biomechanics, biomaterials, metallurgy, biologic response to arthroplasty materials in vivo and in vitro.
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