Nationwide Trends and Variations in Urological Surgical Interventions and Renal Outcome in Patients with Spina Bifida

Hsin-Hsiao S Wang, Jessica C Lloyd, John S Wiener, Jonathan C Routh, Hsin-Hsiao S Wang, Jessica C Lloyd, John S Wiener, Jonathan C Routh

Abstract

Purpose: Bladder dysfunction in patients with spina bifida can lead to significant morbidity due to renal insufficiency. Indications for surgery vary among institutions and the impact is unclear. We examined trends and variations in urological interventions and chronic renal insufficiency in patients with spina bifida.

Materials and methods: We reviewed NIS (Nationwide Inpatient Sample) for all patients with spina bifida treated from 1998 to 2011. We used ICD-9-CM codes to identify urological surgery and chronic renal insufficiency. We calculated the Spearman correlation coefficients between rates of spina bifida related bladder surgeries and rates of chronic renal insufficiency outcomes by state. Linear regression models were fitted to investigate the associations between rates of spina bifida related surgery and chronic renal insufficiency across treatment years.

Results: We identified 427,616 spina bifida hospital admissions. Mean patient age was 26 years and 56% of patients were female. Of the admissions 35,249 (8%) were for chronic renal insufficiency and 11,078 (3%) were for surgery. During the study period chronic renal insufficiency rates doubled from 6% to 12% and surgery rates decreased from 2.0% to 1.8%. There was a moderately weak inverse association between surgery and chronic renal insufficiency rates with time (r = -0.3, p = 0.06) and by state (r = -0.3, p = 0.04). On multivariate analysis higher rates of surgery were associated with the state in which the patient was treated (p <0.001), and with younger age (p <0.001) and hospital teaching status (p <0.001). In contrast, chronic renal insufficiency was not associated with spina bifida related surgery (p = 0.67).

Conclusions: We observed a temporal and geographic trend toward decreasing urological surgery and increasing chronic renal insufficiency rates in spina bifida and a wide variation in urological surgical rates among states. Further study is needed to determine the factors behind these trends and variations in spina bifida management.

Keywords: chronic; kidney; neurogenic; renal insufficiency; spinal dysraphism; urinary bladder; urologic surgical procedures.

Conflict of interest statement

Conflict of Interest: The remaining coauthors have no financial relationships relevant to the article to disclose.

Copyright © 2016 American Urological Association Education and Research, Inc. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

Figures

Figure 1
Figure 1
Per-year comparison of CRI rate (red line) and SB-related urologic surgery rate (blue line); this demonstrates an inverse association over time.
Figure 2
Figure 2
CRI rate versus SB-related urologic surgery rate by state
Figure 3
Figure 3
heat map for SB-related urologic surgery rate
Figure 4
Figure 4
heat map for CRI rate

Source: PubMed

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