Early Carotid Revascularization Rates, Procedural Distribution, and Hospital Density

medRxiv(2022)

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摘要
Early carotid revascularization (i.e. during the index hospitalization) may help reduce the risk of additional neurologic events without excess perioperative morbidity. We evaluated the relationship between rates of early carotid endarterectomy (CEA) or stenting (CAS) and hospital density/distribution within metropolitan areas of Texas. Patients with extracranial carotid artery stenosis and either stroke, transient ischemic attacks, or amaurosis were identified among all patients admitted from 2009 to 2013 to non-federal Texas hospitals within all 24 Texas metropolitan statistical areas (MSAs). Early CEA/CAS was defined as occurring during the index hospitalization. A Gini coefficient with bias correction factor was calculated to quantify the distribution of carotid procedures within an MSA. In total, 3,330 (15.4%) of the 21,665 metropolitan patients admitted to Texas hospitals with symptomatic carotid stenosis received early CEA/CAS. Only 263 (44%) of the 600 total hospitals where patients were admitted performed early CEA/CAS. An increasing proportion receiving early carotid CEA/CAS was inversely correlated with the procedural Gini coefficient (p=0.002) and directly correlated with the number of hospitals per 100K population (p=0.01). These two factors accounted for 51% of the variability among MSAs. Early CEA/CAS rates did not correlate with hospital volume or with level 1or 2 stroke centers within an MSA. Increasing the number of hospitals performing early carotid revascularization procedures (i.e. avoiding regionalization/concentration) may help increase the number of patients receiving early carotid revascularization for symptomatic carotid artery disease.
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hospital density
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