1. A National Database Study on Racial Disparities in Route of Hysterectomy With a Surrogate Control for Uterine Size: A Proposed Quality Metric for Benign Indications.
- Author
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Palacios-Helgeson LK, Premkumar A, Wong JMK, Gould CH, Cahn MA, and Osmundsen BC
- Subjects
- Adult, Female, Humans, Middle Aged, Black or African American, Cross-Sectional Studies, Databases, Factual, Organ Size, United States, Uterine Hemorrhage surgery, Uterine Hemorrhage ethnology, Uterus surgery, White, Healthcare Disparities ethnology, Healthcare Disparities statistics & numerical data, Hysterectomy methods, Hysterectomy statistics & numerical data
- Abstract
Study Objective: To investigate the association between race and route of hysterectomy among patients undergoing hysterectomy for abnormal uterine bleeding (AUB) in the absence of uterine myoma disease and excluding malignancy., Design: A cross-sectional cohort study utilizing the Healthcare Cost and Utilization Project Nationwide Inpatient Sample and National Ambulatory Surgical databases to compare abdominal to minimally invasive routes of hysterectomy., Setting: Hospitals and hospital-affiliated ambulatory surgical centers participating in the Healthcare Cost and Utilization Project in 2019., Patients: A total of 75 838 patients who had undergone hysterectomy for AUB, excluding uterine myoma and malignancy., Interventions: n/a MEASUREMENTS AND MAIN RESULTS: Of the 75 838 hysterectomies performed for AUB in the absence of uterine myomas and malignancy, 10.1% were performed abdominally and 89.9% minimally invasively. After adjusting for confounders, Black patients were 38% more likely to undergo abdominal hysterectomy compared to White patients (OR 1.38, CI 1.12-1.70 p = .002). Black race, thus, is independently associated with open surgery., Conclusion: Despite excluding uterine myomas as a risk factor for an abdominal route of hysterectomy, Black race remained an independent predictor for abdominal versus minimally invasive hysterectomy, and Black patients were found to undergo a disproportionately higher rate of abdominal hysterectomy compared to White patients., (Copyright © 2024 AAGL. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2024
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