Economic Disparities in Utilization and Outcomes of Structural Heart Disease Interventions in the United States

Author Department

Cardiology; Medicine

Document Type

Article, Peer-reviewed

Publication Date

7-2024

Abstract

Background: Disparities in access to care cause negative health consequences for underserved populations. Economic disparities in structural heart disease (SHD) interventions are not well characterized.

Objectives: The objective of this study was to evaluate economic disparities in the utilization and outcomes of SHD interventions in the United States.

Methods: We queried the National Inpatient Sample (2016-2020) to examine economic disparities in the utilization, in-hospital outcomes, length of stay, and cost of SHD interventions among patients ≥65 years of age. Outcomes were determined using logistic regression models.

Results: A total of 401,005 weighted hospitalizations for transcatheter aortic valve replacement, left atrial appendage occlusion, transcatheter mitral valve repair, and transcatheter mitral valve replacement were included. Utilization rates (number of procedures performed per 100,000 hospitalizations) were higher in patients with high income compared with medium and low income for transcatheter aortic valve replacement (559 vs 456 vs 338), left atrial appendage occlusion (148 vs 136 vs 99), transcatheter mitral valve repair (65 vs 54 vs 41), and transcatheter mitral valve replacement (7.7 vs 6.7 vs 1.2) (all P < 0.01). Low- and medium-income patients had distinctive demographic and clinical risk profiles compared with high-income patients. There were no significant differences in the adjusted in-hospital mortality, key complications, or length of stay between high-, medium-, and low-income patients following any of the 4 SHD interventions. High-income patients incurred a modestly higher cost with any of the 4 SHD interventions compared with medium- and low-income patients.

Conclusions: Economic disparities exist in the utilization of SHD interventions in the United States. Nonetheless, adjusted in-hospital outcomes were comparable among high-, medium-, and low-income patients. Multifaceted implementation strategies are needed to attenuate these utilization disparities.

Keywords: LAAO; TAVR; TMVR; TMVr; economic disparities; structural heart disease.

PMID

39130026

Share

COinS