智能手机加速计作为研究社会经济差异对神经外科结果影响的工具:一项多机构回顾性分析。

IF 2.9 2区 医学 Q2 CLINICAL NEUROLOGY
Journal of neurosurgery. Spine Pub Date : 2025-01-24 Print Date: 2025-04-01 DOI:10.3171/2024.9.SPINE24639
Daksh Chauhan, Hasan S Ahmad, Kristen Park, Yohannes Ghenbot, Robert Subtirelu, Ryan W Turlip, Kevin Bryan, Patrick T Wang, Malek Bashti, Dmitriy Petrov, Zarina S Ali, Ali K Ozturk, Neil Malhotra, Gregory Basil, Jang W Yoon
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引用次数: 0

摘要

目的:智能手机和可穿戴设备是客观评估脊柱手术前后患者活动能力和健康状况的有效工具。在这项回顾性观察性研究中,作者调查了这些纵向围手术期患者活动数据与社会经济和人口统计学相关性之间的关系,评估智能手机捕获的指标是否可以让神经外科医生区分组间模式。方法:对2017年至2021年间行脊柱减压融合和不融合患者进行多机构回顾性研究。患者的家庭邮政编码被用来确定每个患者的区域剥夺指数(ADI)——一种独立验证的综合措施,衡量一个特定社区相对于整个美国的社会经济健康。从患者智能手机中提取活动数据,包括2年围手术期每天的步数,并进行统计归一化,以便进行患者间比较。进行多变量回归以确定ADI与患者活动能力之间的关系,同时控制混杂因素,包括年龄和肥胖。结果:纳入49例患者。居住在全国ADI评分低于80百分位社区的患者术前活动水平显著高于居住在全国ADI评分高于80百分位社区的患者(p = 0.011)。患者的ADI评分与术前日均步数低于平均值的天数呈正相关(调整后r2 = 0.822, p = 0.049)。术后,ADI评分高于第80百分位的患者有更大的活动水平(p = 0.031)。结论:作者的研究表明,生活在ADI评分低于80百分位的社区的个体术前活动高于高于80百分位的社区的患者;脊柱手术后,这种差异会减小。虽然这些发现不能推广,但作者假设,生活在富裕社区的患者术后相对较快的恢复可能是多因素的,可能是由于低收入社区患者在术前和可能出现症状期的持续活动,以及高收入社区患者术后护理的增加。总的来说,作者的研究结果表明,智能手机捕捉的活动可以作为研究手术结果的社会经济差异的指标。未来的研究必须明确地将社会经济变量作为潜在的因果因素,以改善手术后的医疗服务。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Smartphone accelerometers as tools to study the effect of socioeconomic disparities in neurosurgical outcomes: a multi-institutional retrospective analysis.

Objective: Smartphones and wearable devices can be effective tools to objectively assess patient mobility and well-being before and after spine surgery. In this retrospective observational study, the authors investigated the relationship between these longitudinal perioperative patient activity data and socioeconomic and demographic correlates, assessing whether smartphone-captured metrics may allow neurosurgeons to distinguish intergroup patterns.

Methods: A multi-institutional retrospective study of patients who underwent spinal decompression with and without fusion between 2017 and 2021 was conducted. Patients' home zip codes were used to determine each patient's Area Deprivation Index (ADI)-an independently validated composite measure of the socioeconomic health of a specific neighborhood relative to the entire United States. Activity data, including steps-taken-per-day across a 2-year perioperative period, were extracted from patient smartphones and statistically normalized to enable interpatient comparisons. Multivariate regression was performed to identify relationships between ADI and patient mobility, while controlling for confounders including age and obesity.

Results: The study included 49 patients. The preoperative activity level of patients living in neighborhoods with an ADI score below the 80th percentile nationally was significantly greater than that of patients living in neighborhoods above the 80th percentile (p = 0.011). A direct positive correlation existed between patients' ADI scores and the number of days with below-average steps-taken-per-day during the preoperative period (adjusted r2 = 0.822, p = 0.049). Postoperatively, patients with ADI scores above the 80th percentile had significantly greater documented activity levels (p = 0.031).

Conclusions: The authors' study demonstrates that individuals living in neighborhoods with an ADI score below the 80th percentile had higher preoperative activity than patients in neighborhoods above the 80th percentile; this disparity diminishes after spine surgery. Though these findings are not generalizable, the authors hypothesized that the relatively faster postoperative recovery of patients living in wealthier neighborhoods is likely multifactorial, possibly due to sustained activity in the preoperative and likely symptomatic period of patients in lower-income neighborhoods, as well as enhanced access to postoperative care for patients in higher-income neighborhoods. Overall, the findings from the authors' study demonstrate that smartphone-captured activity may be utilized as a metric to study socioeconomic disparities in surgical outcomes. Future studies must specifically isolate socioeconomic variables as potential causal factors to inform improvements in healthcare delivery after surgery.

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来源期刊
Journal of neurosurgery. Spine
Journal of neurosurgery. Spine 医学-临床神经学
CiteScore
5.10
自引率
10.70%
发文量
396
审稿时长
6 months
期刊介绍: Primarily publish original works in neurosurgery but also include studies in clinical neurophysiology, organic neurology, ophthalmology, radiology, pathology, and molecular biology.
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