Placenta accreta spectrum (PAS) refers to the spectrum of diagnoses involving abnormally and morbidly adherent trophoblastic tissue to the gravid uterus. These disorders are associated with significant maternal morbidity and… Click to show full abstract
Placenta accreta spectrum (PAS) refers to the spectrum of diagnoses involving abnormally and morbidly adherent trophoblastic tissue to the gravid uterus. These disorders are associated with significant maternal morbidity and mortality. While race/ethnicity is known to impact pregnancy outcomes, racial disparities have not been previously examined in women with PAS. The objective of current study was to compare patient characteristics and perioperative outcomes of women with PAS who underwent cesarean delivery across race/ethnicity. This is a comparative study that retrospectively queried the National Inpatient Sample, a hospital-based inpatient database in the USA. The study cohort was women diagnosed with PAS who underwent cesarean delivery from 10/2015 to 12/2018. The exposure group was race/ethnicity. Main outcomes were (i) patient/pregnancy characteristics and (ii) surgical morbidity for cesarean delivery, assessed in multivariable analysis. A total of 10,535 women comprised the study cohort (White n = 5,230 [49.6%], Black n = 2,045 [19.4%], Hispanic n = 2,540 [24.1%], and Asian n = 720 [6.8%]). Patient demographics, pregnancy characteristics, and hospital factors for the non-White groups significantly differed compared to the White group. Older age, obesity, diabetes, placenta previa, percreta, non-elective surgery, lower median household income, and Medicaid particularly represented the non-White groups. When perioperative outcomes were compared, non-White women were more likely to have any measured complications, hemorrhage/transfusion, and shock/coagulopathy compared to White women. Various sensitivity analyses redemonstrated the main cohort results. In conclusion, this study suggests that there were significant disparities in patient characteristics and outcomes of women with PAS across race/ethnicity.
               
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