医院资源指数、种族/族裔与术后静脉血栓栓塞风险:因果中介分析

IF 2.7 3区 医学 Q1 SURGERY American journal of surgery Pub Date : 2024-08-17 DOI:10.1016/j.amjsurg.2024.115909
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引用次数: 0

摘要

方法全国住院病人抽样数据仅限于因恶性肿瘤而进行的大型腹部手术(1993-2020 年)。医院资源指数是衡量医院规模、教学状况和私人付费者比例的综合指标。复合 VTE 结果包括术后深静脉血栓和肺栓塞。结果在 1,169,862 例手术中,未经调整的 VTE 发生率为 1.0%(14,789 例)。相对于白人/高加索人,黑人/非洲裔美国人的 VTE 风险高出 28%(调整后比值比 = 1.28,95 % CI:1.21, 1.37)。黑人的 VTE 风险随着医院资源指数的增加而降低(超额风险 = -0.005,p < 0.001),其效应大小可能对临床影响极小。改变生活方式的行为、环境因素和合并症管理对降低风险的影响可能更大。
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Hospital resource index, race/ethnicity, and postoperative venous thromboembolism risk: A causal mediation analysis

Background

We examined whether hospital resources mediated the association between race/ethnicity and postoperative VTE, in a national cohort.

Methods

National Inpatient Sample data were restricted to major abdominal surgeries (1993–2020) performed for malignancies. Hospital resource index was as a summary measure of hospital size, teaching status, and private payor proportions. The composite VTE outcome included postoperative deep vein thrombosis and pulmonary embolism. Adjusted logistic regression with 4-way decomposition described joint and mediating effects.

Results

Among 1,169,862 surgeries, unadjusted VTE rate was 1.0 ​% (14,789). VTE risk was 28 ​% higher for Black/African Americans (adjusted Odds Ratio ​= ​1.28, 95 ​% CI: 1.21, 1.37) relative to White/Caucasians. VTE risk was lower among Black individuals as hospital resource index increased (excess risk ​= ​−0.005, p ​< ​0.001), with an effect size of likely minimal clinical impact.

Conclusion

Cohorts that are more vulnerable to postoperative VTE did not meaningfully benefit from improving hospital resources. It is likely that lifestyle modifying behaviors, environmental factors, and comorbidity management are more influential in reducing risks.

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来源期刊
CiteScore
5.00
自引率
6.70%
发文量
570
审稿时长
56 days
期刊介绍: The American Journal of Surgery® is a peer-reviewed journal designed for the general surgeon who performs abdominal, cancer, vascular, head and neck, breast, colorectal, and other forms of surgery. AJS is the official journal of 7 major surgical societies* and publishes their official papers as well as independently submitted clinical studies, editorials, reviews, brief reports, correspondence and book reviews.
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