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Racial Differences in Perioperative Complications, Readmissions, and Mortalities After Elective Spine Surgery in the United States: A Systematic Review Using AI-Assisted Bibliometric Analysis

Izzet Akosman, Neerav Kumar, R L Mortenson, Amanda Lans, Rafael De la Garza Ramos, Ananth Eleswarapu, Reza Yassari, Mitchell S. Fourman

2023Global Spine Journal14 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Study Design Systematic Review and Meta-analysis. Objectives To evaluate the impact of race on post-operative outcomes and complications following elective spine surgery in the United States. Methods PUBMED, MEDLINE(R), ERIC, EMBASE, and SCOPUS were searched for studies documenting peri-operative events for White and African American (AA) patients following elective spine surgery. Pooled odds ratios were calculated for each 90-day outcome and meta-analyses were performed for 4 peri-operative events and 7 complication categories. Sub-analyses were performed for each outcome on single institution (SI) studies and works that included <100,000 patients. Results 53 studies (5,589,069 patients, 9.8% AA) were included. Eleven included >100,000 patients. AA patients had increased rates of 90-day readmission (OR 1.33, P = .0001), non-routine discharge (OR 1.71, P = .0001), and mortality (OR 1.66, P = .0003), but not re-operation (OR 1.16, P = .1354). AA patients were more likely to have wound-related complications (OR 1.47, P = .0001) or medical complications (OR 1.35, P = .0006), specifically cardiovascular (OR 1.33, P = .0126), deep vein thrombosis/pulmonary embolism (DVT/PE) (OR 2.22, P = .0188) and genitourinary events (OR 1.17, P = .0343). SI studies could only detect racial differences in re-admissions and non-routine discharges. Studies with <100,000 patients replicated the above findings but found no differences in cardiovascular complications. Disparities in mortality were only detected when all studies were included. Conclusions AA patients faced a greater risk of morbidity across several distinct categories of peri-operative events. SI studies can be underpowered to detect more granular complication types (genitourinary, DVT/PE). Rare events, such as mortality, require larger sample sizes to identify significant racial disparities.

Topics & Concepts

MedicineDeep veinPerioperativePulmonary embolismMeta-analysisOdds ratioThrombosisComplicationSurgeryMEDLINEInternal medicinePolitical scienceLawSpine and Intervertebral Disc PathologyCardiac, Anesthesia and Surgical OutcomesAnesthesia and Pain Management
Racial Differences in Perioperative Complications, Readmissions, and Mortalities After Elective Spine Surgery in the United States: A Systematic Review Using AI-Assisted Bibliometric Analysis | Litcius