1. Racial Disparities in Surgical Outcomes after Mastectomy in 223,000 Female Breast Cancer Patients - A Retrospective Cohort Study
- Author
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Knoedler, Samuel, Kauke-Navarro, Martin, Knoedler, Leonard, Friedrich, Sarah, Matar, Dany Y, Diatta, Fortunay, Mookerjee, Vikram G, Ayyala, Haripriya, Wu, Mengfan, Kim, Bong-Sung; https://orcid.org/0000-0002-1022-3553, Machens, Hans-Guenther, Pomahac, Bohdan, Orgill, Dennis P, Broer, P Niclas, Panayi, Adriana C, Knoedler, Samuel, Kauke-Navarro, Martin, Knoedler, Leonard, Friedrich, Sarah, Matar, Dany Y, Diatta, Fortunay, Mookerjee, Vikram G, Ayyala, Haripriya, Wu, Mengfan, Kim, Bong-Sung; https://orcid.org/0000-0002-1022-3553, Machens, Hans-Guenther, Pomahac, Bohdan, Orgill, Dennis P, Broer, P Niclas, and Panayi, Adriana C
- Abstract
BACKGROUND: Breast cancer mortality and treatment differ across racial groups. It remains unclear whether such disparities are also reflected in perioperative outcomes of breast cancer patients undergoing mastectomy. STUDY DESIGN: We reviewed the American College of Surgeons National Surgical Quality Improvement Program (ACS-NSQIP) database (2008-2021) to identify female patients who underwent mastectomy for oncological purposes. The outcomes were stratified by five racial groups (white, Black/African American, Asian, American Indian/Alaska Native, and Native Hawaiian/Pacific Islander) and included 30-day mortality, reoperation, readmission, surgical and medical complications, and non-home discharge. RESULTS: The study population included 222,947 patients, 68% (n=151,522) of whom were white, 11% (n=23,987) Black/African American, 5% (n=11,217) Asian, 0.5% (n=1,198) American Indian/Alaska Native, and 0.5% (n=1,018) Native Hawaiian/Pacific Islander. While 136,690 (61%) patients underwent partial mastectomy, 54,490 (24%) and 31,767 (14%) women received simple and radical mastectomy, respectively. Overall, adverse events occurred in 17, 222 (7.7%) patients, the largest portion of which were surgical complications (n=7,246; 3.3%). Multivariable analysis revealed that being of Asian race was protective against perioperative complications (OR=0.71; P<0.001), whereas American Indian/Alaska Native women were most vulnerable to the complication occurrence (OR=1.41; P<0.001). Black/African American patients had a significantly lower risk of medical (OR=0.59; P<0.001) and surgical complications (OR=0.60; P<0.001) after partial and radical mastectomy, respectively, their likelihood of readmission (OR=1.14; P=0.045) following partial mastectomy was significantly increased. CONCLUSION: We identified American Indian/Alaska Native women as particularly vulnerable to complications following mastectomy. Asian patients experienced the lowest rate of complications in the perioperative p
- Published
- 2024