C.7 Does gender equality exist in the surgical management of degenerative lumbar disease?

Background: Despite efforts toward gender equality in clinical trial enrollment, females are frequently underrepresented and gender-specific data analysis is often unavailable. The purpose of this study was to determine if gender equality exists in the management of degenerative lumbar disease. Meth...

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Veröffentlicht in:Canadian journal of neurological sciences 2021-11, Vol.48 (s3), p.S20-S20
Hauptverfasser: MacLean, MA, Touchette, CJ, Han, J, Christie, SD, Pickett, G
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container_end_page S20
container_issue s3
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container_title Canadian journal of neurological sciences
container_volume 48
creator MacLean, MA
Touchette, CJ
Han, J
Christie, SD
Pickett, G
description Background: Despite efforts toward gender equality in clinical trial enrollment, females are frequently underrepresented and gender-specific data analysis is often unavailable. The purpose of this study was to determine if gender equality exists in the management of degenerative lumbar disease. Methods: Part 1: A systematic scoping review was conducted according to PRISMA guidelines, in order to synthesize the adult surgical literature regarding gender differences in pre- and post-operative clinical assessment scores for patients diagnosed with degenerative lumbar disease. Part 2: An ambispective cohort analysis (multi-variate logistic regression) of the Canadian Spine Outcomes Research Network registry was performed to address knowledge gaps identified in “Part 1”. Results: Part 1: Thirty articles were identified, accounting for 32,951 patients. Female patients have worse absolute pre-operative pain, disability and health-related quality-of-life (HRQoL). Following surgery, females have worse absolute pain, disability, and HRQoL, but demonstrate an equal or greater interval change compared to males. Part 2: Data was analyzed for 5,039 patients. Significant gender differences in pre-operative utilization of healthcare resources (medication use, diagnostic testing, medical and allied healthcare professional visits) were identified. Conclusions: Significant gender disparities in clinical assessment scores and the pre-operative utilization of healthcare resources were identified for patients undergoing surgery for degenerative lumbar disease.
doi_str_mv 10.1017/cjn.2021.283
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source Cambridge Journals
subjects CNSS Chair’s Select Abstract Presentations
Degenerative disc disease
Equality
Gender differences
Gender equity
Platform Presentations
title C.7 Does gender equality exist in the surgical management of degenerative lumbar disease?
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