Clin
Cardiol 2000 Aug;23(8):580-6
Clinical and nonclinical correlates of racial and ethnic differences
in recommendation patterns for coronary revascularization.
Barnhart JM, Wassertheil-Smoller S, Monrad ES.
Department of Epidemiology, Albert Einstein College of Medicine, Bronx,
New York, USA.
BACKGROUND: We sought to determine whether gender or
racial differences exist in recommendations for coronary revascularization
in a multiracial patient population undergoing their first coronary angiography
at an academic institution from 1990-1993 for the evaluation of coronary
artery disease (CAD).
HYPOTHESIS: For patients with clinically significant
CAD, no racial differences exist in the recommendation to revascularization
following coronary angiography.
METHODS: The main outcome measure was a recommendation
for coronary revascularization such as percutaneous transluminal coronary
angioplasty (PTCA) or coronary artery bypass graft (CABG) for patients
with clinically significant CAD (n = 590). The primary multiple logistic
regression analysis focused on only those patients with angiographically
severe disease, defined as triple-vessel or left main CAD (n = 180). Race
was trichotomized into Hispanic, black, and white to ascertain whether
any differential effects of race/ethnicity existed while controlling for
age, gender, ejection fraction, angina, diabetes, hypertension, and peripheral
vascular disease. A medical record review for all patients with severe
CAD, who were given a recommendation for medical therapy, was conducted
to ascertain whether previously unmeasured clinical factors or nonclinical
factors may have precluded a PTCA/CABG recommendation.
RESULTS: Hispanics with severe disease were significantly
less likely than whites to be given a recommendation for PTCA/CABG following
angiography [odds ratio (OR) = 0.39; 95% confidence interval (CI) (0.17,
0.92)]. Blacks were 67% as likely as whites to be given such a recommendation
[OR = 0.67; 95% CI (0.17, 2.71)]. Medical records, reviewed for 35 of
40 of these patients given a recommendation for medical therapy, revealed
that 6 patients eventually had PTCA/CABG within 6 months due to precipitating
ischemic events; 9 had such severe or diffuse disease that revascularization
did not appear to be an alternative, and 2 patients opted for medical
therapy.
CONCLUSIONS: Racial differences were manifested in the
recommendations made following angiography and may be explained by previously
unmeasured clinical as well as nonclinical factors.
PMID: 10941543 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]