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Quality of Care in the Treatment of Localized Intermediate and High Risk Prostate Cancer at Minority Serving Hospitals.

Journal of Urology 2019 January 12
PURPOSE: We investigated the quality of care at minority serving hospitals compared to other institutions for men with localized intermediate and high risk prostate cancer.

MATERIALS AND METHODS: Using the NCDB (National Cancer Database) we identified 536,539 men 40 years old or older who presented with localized intermediate and high risk prostate cancer in the United States between 2004 and 2015. Institutions were ranked according to the proportion of black and Hispanic patients treated at a given institution and the top decile institutions were defined as minority serving hospitals. We used multivariable analyses to characterize the association between minority serving hospitals and 3 end points, including receipt of definitive treatment, time to definitive treatment and receipt of androgen deprivation therapy in young (65 years or younger) and healthy (no comorbidity) men treated with external beam radiation therapy.

RESULTS: A total of 162 and 1,168 hospitals were defined as minority and nonminority serving hospitals, respectively. On multivariable analyses minority serving hospitals were associated with decreased odds of receiving definitive treatment (adjusted OR 0.73, 95% CI 0.62-0.85, p <0.001). Adjusted mean ± SE time to treatment was significantly longer at minority serving hospitals compared to nonminority serving hospitals (4.9 ± 2.2 days, p = 0.024). Among young and healthy men there was no association between treatment at a minority serving hospital and receipt of androgen deprivation therapy in conjunction with external beam radiation (AOR 0.90, 95% CI 0.75-1.09, p = 0.291).

CONCLUSIONS: Treatment at a minority serving hospital was associated with lower odds of receiving definitive therapy and longer time to definitive therapy for localized intermediate and high risk prostate cancer despite adjustment for race. This suggests that some racial disparities in prostate cancer may be explained by the sites at which racial and/or ethnic minorities receive care.

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