Katherine E Baker, Emily E Hecox, Mary E McMinn, Shelley R Edwards, Jamie W Lewis, Savannah C Walker, Keeley B Frederick, Laura S Humphries, Ian C Hoppe
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引用次数: 0
摘要
先前的研究已经将颅缝闭锁手术的时机与几个术后结果联系起来。然而,社会人口因素对这一人群手术时机的影响尚不清楚。本研究探讨了社会脆弱性指数(SVI)、种族和城市对颅缝闭锁手术时机的影响。从Epic电子健康记录的国家去识别数据库Cosmos中查询2013年至2023年的回顾性数据。将患者分层为社会人口学队列,使用卡方检验比较每个队列在6个月前和6个月后接受颅缝闭锁手术的比例。根据社会人口学分析的每个预定指标确定了3000多名患者(SVI n = 3369,种族n = 3541,城市化n = 3375)。在5个月或更短时间内接受手术的患者比例下降,而在6个月或更长时间内接受任何手术的患者比例增加(P P SVI和患者种族与颅缝闭合手术的时间有关。具体而言,较高的社会脆弱性和某些种族群体与延迟手术干预相关。这种延迟的表现可能导致无法利用更微创的选择,如带或不带颅骨弹簧放置的条形颅骨切除术。这些发现强调需要有针对性的、针对患者的干预措施,以解决及时获得颅缝闭锁手术的差异。
Impact of Social Vulnerability, Race, and Urbanicity on Surgical Timing for Patients With Craniosynostosis.
Prior studies have linked the timing of craniosynostosis surgeries to several postoperative outcomes. However, less is known regarding the influence of sociodemographic factors on surgical timing for this population. This study investigates the influence of social vulnerability index (SVI), race, and urbanicity on the timing of craniosynostosis surgery.
Retrospective data from 2013 to 2023 were queried from Cosmos, a national deidentified database from Epic electronic health record. Patients were stratified into sociodemographic cohorts, and chi-square tests were used to compare the proportion of each cohort undergoing craniosynostosis surgeries before and after 6 months of age.
More than 3000 patients were identified for each predetermined metric for sociodemographic analysis (SVI n = 3369, race n = 3541, urbanicity n = 3375). The proportion of patients undergoing surgery at 5 months or less decreased and those undergoing any surgery at 6 months or more increased (P < .0001) with increasing SVI. There was also a significant association of surgical timing and patient race (P < .0001) but not urbanicity.
SVI and patient race are associated with the timing of craniosynostosis surgery. Specifically, higher social vulnerability and certain racial groups are correlated with delayed surgical intervention. This delay in presentation may result in the inability to take advantage of more minimally invasive options, such as strip craniectomy with or without cranial spring placement. These findings highlight the need for targeted, patient-specific, interventions to address disparities in access to timely craniosynostosis surgery.
期刊介绍:
The Cleft Palate-Craniofacial Journal (CPCJ) is the premiere peer-reviewed, interdisciplinary, international journal dedicated to current research on etiology, prevention, diagnosis, and treatment in all areas pertaining to craniofacial anomalies. CPCJ reports on basic science and clinical research aimed at better elucidating the pathogenesis, pathology, and optimal methods of treatment of cleft and craniofacial anomalies. The journal strives to foster communication and cooperation among professionals from all specialties.