JAMA 1993 May 26;269(20):2642-6
Racial differences in the use of revascularization procedures after
coronary angiography.
Ayanian JZ, Udvarhelyi IS, Gatsonis CA, Pashos CL, Epstein AM.
Division of General Medicine, Brigham and Women's Hospital, Boston, MA.
OBJECTIVE: To assess whether rates of coronary revascularization
procedures differ between blacks and whites after coronary angiography
is performed and to assess the relationship of these rates to hospital
characteristics.
DESIGN: A retrospective cohort study using 1987 and 1988
data on hospital claims and characteristics from the Health Care Financing
Administration.
SETTING: One thousand four hundred twenty-nine acute
care hospitals that provide coronary angiography in the United States.
PATIENTS: A national sample of 27,485 Medicare Part A
enrollees, aged 65 to 74 years, who underwent inpatient angiography for
coronary heart disease in 1987.
MAIN OUTCOME MEASURE: The adjusted odds of revascularization
with either coronary angioplasty or bypass graft surgery within 90 days
of angiography for whites relative to blacks, controlling for age, sex,
region, Medicaid eligibility, principal diagnosis, comorbid diagnoses,
and hospital characteristics of ownership, teaching status, urban/suburban
or rural location, and availability of revascularization procedures.
RESULTS: White men and women were significantly more
likely than black men and women, respectively, to receive a revascularization
procedure after coronary angiography (57% and 50% vs 40% and 34%, both
P < .001). The adjusted odds of receiving a revascularization procedure
after coronary angiography were 78% higher for whites than blacks (95%
confidence interval for odds ratio, 1.56 to 2.03). Statistically significant
racial differences in the adjusted odds of receiving a revascularization
procedure were present in all types of hospitals except rural hospitals,
and these differences did not vary significantly by any of the four hospital
characteristics (all P > .20 for interaction terms).
CONCLUSIONS: Among Medicare enrollees, whites are more
likely than blacks to receive revascularization procedures after coronary
angiography. Racial differences of similar magnitude occur in all types
of hospitals. These differences may reflect overuse in whites or underuse
in blacks, but they are unlikely to reflect access to cardiologists or
hospitals that perform revascularization procedures. Potential explanations
include unmeasured clinical or socioeconomic factors, differing patient
preferences, and racial bias at the hospitals performing angiography.
PMID: 8487447 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]