Ann Intern Med 2001 Sep 4;135(5):328-37
Racial differences in cardiac revascularization rates: does "overuse"
explain higher rates among white patients?
Schneider EC, Leape LL, Weissman JS, Piana RN, Gatsonis C, Epstein AM.
Department of Health Policy and Management, Harvard School of Public
Health, 677 Huntington Avenue, Boston, MA 02115.
BACKGROUND: Coronary artery bypass graft (CABG) surgery
and percutaneous transluminal coronary angioplasty (PTCA) are well-established
treatments for symptomatic coronary artery disease. Previous studies have
documented racial differences in rates of use of these cardiac revascularization
procedures. Other studies suggest that these procedures are overused:
that is, they are done for patients with clinically inappropriate indications.
OBJECTIVE: To test the hypothesis that the higher rate
of cardiac revascularization among white patients is associated with a
higher prevalence of overuse (revascularization for clinically inappropriate
indications) among white patients than among African-American patients.
DESIGN: Observational cohort study using Medicare claims
and medical record review.
SETTING: 173 hospitals in five U.S. states.
PARTICIPANTS: A stratified, weighted, random sample of
3960 Medicare beneficiaries who underwent coronary angiography during
1991 and 1992; 1692 of these patients underwent 1711 revascularization
procedures within 90 days.
MEASUREMENTS: The proportion of CABG and PTCA procedures
rated appropriate, uncertain, and inappropriate according to RAND criteria,
and the multivariate odds of undergoing inappropriate revascularization
among African-American patients and white patients. RESULTS: After angiography,
rates of PTCA (23% vs. 19%) and CABG surgery (29% vs. 17%) were significantly
higher among white patients than among African-American patients. The
respective rates of inappropriate PTCA and CABG surgery were 14% and 10%.
Among the study states, rates of inappropriate use ranged from 4% to 24%
for PTCA and 0% to 14% for CABG surgery. White patients were more likely
than African-American patients to receive inappropriate PTCA (15% vs.
9%; difference, 6 percentage points [95% CI, -0.4 to 12.7 percentage points]),
and difference by race was statistically significant among men (20% vs.
8%; difference, 12 percentage points [CI, 1.2 to 21.7 percentage points]).
Rates of inappropriate CABG surgery did not differ by race (10% in both
groups).
CONCLUSIONS: Among a large and diverse sample of Medicare
beneficiaries in five U.S. states, overuse of PTCA was greater among white
men than among other groups, but this difference did not fully account
for racial disparities in revascularization. Overuse of cardiac revascularization
varied significantly by geographic region.
PMID: 11529696 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]