Abstract

Study Design:Retrospective cohort study.Objective:To evaluate for racial disparities in elderly patients having undergone lumbar spinal stenosis surgery.Methods:The US Medicare Provider Analysis and Review database (records from 2005 to 2011) was used to identify patients over the age of 65 years, diagnosed with lumbar spinal stenosis, and having undergone lumbar laminectomy or fusion surgery. Blacks were compared to Whites in both unmatched and propensity score-matched populations. The data was analyzed with univariate (χ2 and Wilcoxon rank sum tests for unmatched comparison, and McNemar exact and signed rank sum tests for matched comparison) and multivariate models.Results:Query of the data resulted in a study sample of 12 807 patients; 514 (4.0%) were identified as Black and 12 293 (96%) as White. Blacks were less likely to be discharged home (42.4% vs 58.9%, P < .0001) and had lower repeat operation rates (6.81% vs 11.5%, P = .0009); both remained significant in the propensity score-matched comparison. Finally, Blacks experienced more postoperative complications, higher median Medicare costs, but lower out-of-pocket expenses (P = .0113). Blacks had higher rates of diabetes (33.7% vs 21.5%, P < .0001) and obesity (9.92% vs 6.85%, P = .0074), when compared to Whites, but these comorbidities did not significantly affect odds of 30-day complications.Conclusions:Black patients having undergone lumbar spinal stenosis surgery were more likely to have received fusion at initial operation, had shorter pre- and postoperative follow-up intervals and displayed variances in discharge disposition. Reasons for these differences are not entirely understood; however, educational and socioeconomic factors and possibly ethnic/cultural biases may have contributed. Racial disparities in health care continue to be identified and should be further explored in order to eliminate them.

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