• Neurosurgery · Dec 2023

    Postnatal Myelomeningocele Repair in the United States: Rates and Disparities Before and After the Management of Myelomeningocele Study Trial.

    • Belinda Shao, Jia-Shu Chen, Olivia A Kozel, Oliver Y Tang, Natalie Amaral-Nieves, Rahul A Sastry, Debra Watson-Smith, Julie Monteagudo, Francois I Luks, Stephen R Carr, Petra M Klinge, Robert J Weil, and Konstantina A Svokos.
    • Department of Neurosurgery, Warren Alpert Medical School of Brown University, Providence , Rhode Island , USA.
    • Neurosurgery. 2023 Dec 1; 93 (6): 137413821374-1382.

    Background And ObjectivesEvolving technologies have influenced the practice of myelomeningocele repair (MMCr), including mandatory folic acid fortification, advances in prenatal diagnosis, and the 2011 Management of Myelomeningocele Study (MOMS) trial demonstrating benefits of fetal over postnatal MMCr in select individuals. Postnatal MMCr continues to be performed, especially for those with limitations in prenatal diagnosis, health care access, anatomy, or personal preference. A comprehensive, updated national perspective on the trajectory of postnatal MMCr volumes and patient disparities is absent. We characterize national trends in postnatal MMCr rates before and after the MOMS trial publication (2000-2010 vs 2011-2019) and examine whether historical disparities persist.MethodsThis retrospective, cross-sectional analysis queried Nationwide Inpatient Sample data for postnatal MMCr admissions. Annual and race/ethnicity-specific rates were calculated using national birth registry data. Time series analysis assessed for trends relative to the year 2011. Patient, admission, and outcome characteristics were compared between pre-MOMS and post-MOMS cohorts.ResultsBetween 2000 and 2019, 12 426 postnatal MMCr operations were estimated nationwide. After 2011, there was a gradual, incremental decline in the annual rate of postnatal MMCr. Post-MOMS admissions were increasingly associated with Medicaid insurance and the lowest income quartiles, as well as increased risk indices, length of stay, and hospital charges. By 2019, race/ethnicity-adjusted rates seemed to converge. The mortality rate remained low in both eras, and there was a lower rate of same-admission shunting post-MOMS.ConclusionNational rates of postnatal MMCr gradually declined in the post-MOMS era. Medicaid and low-income patients comprise an increasing majority of MMCr patients post-MOMS, whereas historical race/ethnicity-specific disparities are improving. Now more than ever, we must address disparities in the care of MMC patients before and after birth.Copyright © Congress of Neurological Surgeons 2023. All rights reserved.

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