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Neighborhood Deprivation, Hospital Quality, and Mortality After Cancer Surgery

Authors :
Sidra, Bonner
Andrew M, Ibrahim
Nick, Kunnath
Justin B, Dimick
Hari, Nathan
Source :
Annals of Surgery. 277:73-78
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health), 2022.

Abstract

To evaluate if receipt of complex cancer surgery at high quality hospitals is associated with a reduction in disparities between individuals living in the most and least deprived neighborhoods.The association between social risk factors and worse surgical outcomes for patients undergoing high-risk cancer operations is well documented. To what extent neighborhood socioeconomic deprivation as an isolated social risk factor known to be associated with worse outcomes can be mitigated by hospital quality is less known.Using 100% Medicare fee-for-service claims, we analyzed data on 212,962 Medicare beneficiariesage 65 undergoing liver resection, rectal resection, lung resection, esophagectomy and pancreaticoduodenectomy for cancer between 2014 and 2018. Clinical risk-adjusted 30-day post-operative mortality rates were used to stratify hospitals into quintiles of quality. Beneficiaries were stratified into quintiles based on census tract Area Deprivation Index. The association of hospital quality and neighborhood deprivation with 30-day mortality was assessed using logistic regression.There were 212,962 patients in the cohort including 109,419(51.4%) men with mean (SD) age of 73.8(5.9) years old. At low-quality hospitals, patients living in the most deprived areas had significantly higher risk-adjusted mortality than those from the least deprived areas for all procedures; esophagectomy: 22.3% versus 20.7%; P0.003, liver resection 19.3% versus 16.4%; P0.001, pancreatic resection 15.9% versus 12.9%; P0.001, lung resection 8.3% versus 7.8%; P0.001, rectal resection 8.8% versus 8.1%; P0.001. Surgery at a high-quality hospitals was associated with no significant differences in mortality between individuals living in the most compared to least deprived neighborhoods for esophagectomy, rectal resection, liver resection and pancreatectomy. For example, the adjusted odds of mortality between individuals living in the most deprived compared to least deprived neighborhoods following esophagectomy at low quality hospitals (OR 1.22; 95% CI 1.14-1.31; P0.001) was higher than at high quality hospitals (OR 0.98, 95%CI 0.94-1.02; P=0.03).Receipt of complex cancer surgery at a high-quality hospital was associated with no significant differences in mortality between individuals living in the most deprived neighborhoods compared to least deprived. Initiatives to increase access referrals to high quality hospitals for patients from high deprivation levels may improve outcomes and contribute to mitigating disparities.

Subjects

Subjects :
Surgery

Details

ISSN :
00034932
Volume :
277
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Annals of Surgery
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....c69bf87c5610e091c93c818526f06651
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1097/sla.0000000000005712