Neighborhood Socioeconomic Status Independently Predicts Outcomes After Mitral Valve Surgery

被引:5
|
作者
Iyengar, Amit [1 ]
Patrick, William L. [1 ]
Helmers, Mark R. [1 ]
Kelly, John J. [1 ]
Han, Jason [1 ]
Williams, Matthew L. [2 ]
Mackay, Emily J. [1 ]
Desai, Nimesh D. [1 ]
Cevasco, Marisa [1 ,3 ]
机构
[1] Hosp Univ Penn, Dept Surg, Div Cardiovasc Surg, Philadelphia, PA USA
[2] Yale Sch Med, Dept Surg, Div Cardiovasc Surg, New Haven, CT USA
[3] Hosp Univ Penn, Div Cardiovasc Surg, 3400 Spruce St 6 Silverstein, Philadelphia, PA 19104 USA
关键词
RACE; DISADVANTAGE; REPLACEMENT; MORTALITY;
D O I
10.1016/j.athoracsur.2023.01.002
中图分类号
R5 [内科学];
学科分类号
1002 ; 100201 ;
摘要
BACKGROUND Socioeconomic status has increasingly recognized influence on outcomes after cardiac surgery. However, singular metrics fail to fully capture the socioeconomic context within which patients live, which vary greatly between neighborhoods. We sought to explore the impact of neighborhood-level socioeconomic status on patients undergoing mitral valve surgery in the United States. METHODS Adults undergoing first-time, isolated mitral valve surgery were queried from The Society of Thoracic Sur-geons Adult Cardiac Surgery Database between 2012 and 2018. Socioeconomic status was quantified using the Area Deprivation Index, a weighted composite including average housing prices, household incomes, education, and employment levels. The associations between regional deprivation, access to mitral surgery, valve repair rates, and outcomes were evaluated using logistic regression.RESULTS Among 137,100 patients included, patients with socioeconomic deprivation had fewer elective presentations, more comorbidity burden, and more urgent/emergent surgery. Patients from less disadvantaged areas received oper-ations from higher volume surgeons and had higher repair rates (highest vs lowest quintile: 72% vs 51%, P < .001, more minimally-invasive approach (33% vs 20%, P < .001), lower composite complication rate (42% vs 50%, P < .001), and lower 30-day mortality (1.8% vs 3.9%, P < .001). After hierarchical multivariable adjustment, the Area Deprivation Index significantly predicted 30-day mortality and repair rate (P < .001).CONCLUSIONS In a risk-adjusted national analysis of mitral surgery, patients from more deprived areas were less likely to undergo mitral repair and more likely to have complications. Further work at targeting neighborhood-level disparity is important to improving mitral surgical outcomes in the United States.
引用
收藏
页码:940 / 947
页数:8
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Insurance Status and Socioeconomic Markers Affect Readmission Rates After Cardiac Valve Surgery
    Feng, T. Robert
    Hoyler, Marguerite M.
    Ma, Xiaoyue
    Rong, Lisa Q.
    White, Robert S.
    JOURNAL OF CARDIOTHORACIC AND VASCULAR ANESTHESIA, 2020, 34 (03) : 668 - 678
  • [2] Neighborhood-Level Socioeconomic Status Predicts Extended Length of Stay After Elective Anterior Cervical Spine Surgery
    Hagan, Matthew J.
    Sastry, Rahul A.
    Feler, Joshua
    Shaaya, Elias A.
    Sullivan, Patricia Z.
    Abinader, Jose Fernandez
    Camara, Joaquin Q.
    Niu, Tianyi
    Fridley, Jared S.
    Oyelese, Adetokunbo A.
    Sampath, Prakash
    Telfeian, Albert E.
    Gokaslan, Ziya L.
    Toms, Steven A.
    Weil, Robert J.
    WORLD NEUROSURGERY, 2022, 163 : E341 - E348
  • [3] Neighborhood Socioeconomic Status and Mechanical Thrombectomy Outcomes
    Salwi, Sanjana
    Kelly, Katherine A.
    Patel, Pious D.
    Fusco, Matthew R.
    Mistry, Eva A.
    Mistry, Akshitkumar M.
    Chitale, Rohan, V
    JOURNAL OF STROKE & CEREBROVASCULAR DISEASES, 2021, 30 (02)
  • [4] Neighborhood socioeconomic status and length of stay after congenital heart disease surgery
    Vashist, Sudhir
    Dudeck, Brandon S.
    Sherfy, Beth
    Rosenthal, Geoffrey L.
    Chaves, Alicia H.
    FRONTIERS IN PEDIATRICS, 2023, 11
  • [5] Clinical Outcomes after Mitral Valve Surgery in Failed MitraClip Procedures
    Pingpoh, Clarence
    Kreibich, Maximillian
    Berger, Tim
    Thoma, Martin
    Beyersdorf, Friedhelm
    Comberg, Thomas
    Fagu, Albi
    Siepe, Matthias
    Czerny, Martin
    THORACIC AND CARDIOVASCULAR SURGEON, 2023, 71 (03) : 165 - 170
  • [6] Outcomes of mitral valve surgery for severe ischemic mitral regurgitation
    Dufendach, Keith
    Aranda-Michel, Edgar
    Sultan, Ibrahim
    Gleason, Thomas G.
    Navid, Forozan
    Thoma, Floyd
    Kilic, Arman
    JOURNAL OF CARDIAC SURGERY, 2020, 35 (02) : 390 - 396
  • [7] Contemporary outcomes in reoperative mitral valve surgery
    Mehaffey, Hunter J.
    Hawkins, Robert B.
    Schubert, Sarah
    Fonner, Clifford
    Yarboro, Leora T.
    Quader, Mohammed
    Speir, Alan
    Rich, Jeff
    Kron, Irving L.
    Ailawadi, Gorav
    HEART, 2018, 104 (08) : 652 - 656
  • [8] Early and Late Outcomes After Minimally Invasive Mitral Valve Repair Surgery
    Akowuah, Enoch
    Burdett, Clare
    Khan, Khalid
    Goodwin, Andrew
    Lage, Ignacio Bibiloni
    El-Saegh, Mohamed
    Smailes, Tracey
    Hunter, Steven
    JOURNAL OF HEART VALVE DISEASE, 2015, 24 (04) : 470 - 477
  • [9] Association of Neighborhood Socioeconomic Status With Outcomes in Patients Surviving Stroke
    Stulberg, Eric L.
    Twardzik, Erica
    Kim, Sehee
    Hsu, Chia-Wei
    Xu, Yuliang
    Clarke, Philippa
    Morgenstern, Lewis B.
    Lisabeth, Lynda D.
    NEUROLOGY, 2021, 96 (21) : E2599 - E2610
  • [10] Predictors of survival in octogenarians after mitral valve surgery for degenerative disease: The Mitral Surgery in Octogenarians study
    Chivasso, Pierpaolo
    Bruno, Vito D.
    Farid, Shakil
    Malvindi, Pietro Giorgio
    Modi, Amit
    Benedetto, Umberto
    Ciulli, Franco
    Abu-Omar, Yasir
    Caputo, Massimo
    Angelini, Gianni D.
    Livesey, Steve
    Vohra, Hunaid A.
    JOURNAL OF THORACIC AND CARDIOVASCULAR SURGERY, 2018, 155 (04) : 1474 - +