Ventral hernia repair with permanent mesh for non-Hispanic black versus white patients: access and post-operative outcomes in the era of robotic surgery

Background Robotic ventral hernia surgery may provide better patient outcomes. Whether it is provided equitably based on race remains unknown. Methods We examined whether patients from the Abdominal Core Health Quality Collaborative who were Black had equitable access to robotic surgery for ventral...

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Veröffentlicht in:Surgical endoscopy 2025, Vol.39 (1), p.560-567
Hauptverfasser: Chao, Grace F., Ying, Lee, Huang, Li-Ching, Ma, Jianing, Ghiassi, Saber, Gibbs, Karen E., Nadzam, Geoffrey, Morton, John, Duffy, Andrew, Zhou, Randal
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Background Robotic ventral hernia surgery may provide better patient outcomes. Whether it is provided equitably based on race remains unknown. Methods We examined whether patients from the Abdominal Core Health Quality Collaborative who were Black had equitable access to robotic surgery for ventral hernia repair with permanent mesh compared to white counterparts from 2013 to 2023. We performed propensity-score matching to address confounding and then chi-squared testing to examine access to robotic, laparoscopic, and open approaches. Secondary outcomes included 30-day readmissions, complications, and death and 1- and 2-year hernia recurrence and quality of life measured by HerQLes Summary and PROMIS Pain T-Scores analyzed with chi-squared, Fisher exact, and Wilcoxon testing. Results 2397 patients identified as Black, and 21,900 identified as white. Our propensity-score matched cohort included 2374 Black patients and 7122 white. Black and white groups had the same rates of laparoscopy (15% vs 15%). Patients who identified as Black were more likely to undergo robotic surgery (36% vs 32%). Open approach was 49% for Black and 53% for white ( p  = 0.005). For 30-day complications, we found Black patients were more likely to experience reoperation (2% vs 1%, p  = 0.005) and less likely surgical site infection (1% vs 2%, p  
ISSN:0930-2794
1432-2218
1432-2218
DOI:10.1007/s00464-024-11252-5