ELSEVIER

Available online at www.sciencedirect.com ScienceDirect

journal homepage: www.JournalofSurgicalResearch.com

JSR Surgical Research

Society of Asian Academic Surgeons

Treatment Differences for Adrenocortical Carcinoma by Race and Insurance Status

A ☒ Check for updates

Simon A. Holoubek, DO,a,b,c Erin C. MacKinney, MD,a,d Amna M. Khokar, MD,a,e Kristine M. Kuchta, MS,f David J. Winchester, MD,a,d Richard A. Prinz, MD,a,d and Tricia A. Moo-Young, MDa,d,*

ª NorthShore University HealthSystem, Department of Surgery, Evanston, Illinois

b Augusta University, Otolaryngology Department, Head and Neck Surgery, Augusta, Georgia

“University of Wisconsin School of Medicine and Public Health, Division of Endocrine Surgery, Madison, Wisconsin

d University of Chicago, Department of Surgery, Chicago, Illinois

e Department of Surgery, Stroger Cook County Hospital, Chicago, Illinois f Bioinformatics and Research Core, NorthShore University HealthSystem, Evanston, Illinois

ARTICLE INFO

Article history: Received 3 December 2021 Received in revised form 19 April 2022 Accepted 22 May 2022 Available online 17 August 2022

Keywords:

Adrenal Adrenalectomy Adrenocortical carcinoma Disparity Outcomes

ABSTRACT

Introduction: To determine if treatment and clinical outcomes of adrenocortical carcinoma (ACC) vary by race and insurance status.

Methods: ACC patients from the National Cancer Database (2004-2017) were reviewed. Race was defined as White versus minority (Black and Hispanic). Insurance types were private (PI) versus other (Medicaid/uninsured/unknown). Metastatic ACC (M-ACC) was defined as distant metastases at the time of diagnosis; nonmetastatic ACC (NM-ACC) patient had no distant disease.

Results: Of 2351 NM-ACC patients, 83.6% were White and 16.4% minority. There were 1216 M-ACC patients, with 80.3% White and 19.8% minority. Both White NM-ACC and M-ACC patients had more PI (each P < 0.001). PI NM-ACC was associated with a shorter duration from diagnosis to first treatment (14 versus 18 d, P = 0.005). Both NM-ACC and M-ACC with PI were more likely to receive surgery (92.6% versus 86.9%, P = 0.001 and 35.4% versus 27%, P = 0.02) and to receive surgery sooner (13 versus 16 d, P = 0.03). M-ACC with PI were more likely to receive chemotherapy (63.6% versus 54.3%, P = 0.01) and to have lymph nodes examined (14.8% versus 8.6%, P = 0.02). Length of stay postoperatively was shorter for White NM-ACC (6 versus 7 d, P = 0.04) and M-ACC (8 versus 17 d, P = 0.02). For NM-ACC and M-ACC, the 30-d readmission, 90-d mortality, and overall survival were similar by race. A multivariable analysis showed minorities (OR 0.69, 95% confidence interval 0.54-0.88, P = 0.003) and patients without PI (OR 0.75, 95% confidence interval 0.58-0.97, P = 0.03) were less likely to have surgery. However, a multivariable analysis showed survival was similar for White versus minority patients and PI versus other.

* Corresponding author. NorthShore University HealthSystem, Department of Surgery, 2650 Ridge Avenue, Walgreen Suite 2507, Evan- ston, Illinois 60201. Tel .: +1 1847 570 1700; fax: +1 1847 733 5296. E-mail address: tmoo-young@northshore.org (T.A. Moo-Young). 0022-4804/$ - see front matter @ 2022 Published by Elsevier Inc. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jss.2022.05.011

Conclusions: White NM-ACC or M-ACC and PI were more likely to receive surgery and timely multimodality care. These disparities were not associated with differences in 90-d mor- tality or overall survival.

@ 2022 Published by Elsevier Inc.

Introduction

Adrenocortical carcinoma (ACC) is a rare disease with an approximately one case per million annual worldwide inci- dence.1,2 It has a 1.5:1 female to male ratio and is associated with a poor prognosis, especially when it is diagnosed at late stages of the disease.3 Surgical resection with negative tumor margins is associated with superior long-term outcomes. However, ACC presents as advanced disease in 50%-70% of patients. Both positive surgical margins and lymph node involvement are associated with poor outcomes.4,5 Patients who present with metastatic disease are at a higher risk for recurrence and are candidates for adjuvant chemotherapy.6

Adrenal surgery has increased over the past 2 decades by almost 50%.7 This increase is multifactorial and is likely due to increased diagnosis from incidental high resolution cross- sectional imaging (computed tomography and magnetic reso- nance imaging) and the widespread adoption of minimally invasive adrenalectomy. The rise of laparoscopic-assisted and robotic-assisted surgical approaches is generally associated with decreased postoperative morbidity.8

Health disparities have been implicated as an important factor with regard to poor healthcare access and worse sur- gical outcomes for several conditions in the United States.9-12 Race and socioeconomic status have been suggested as an important variable when studying outcomes in colorectal cancer, cardiac surgery, and orthopedic surgery. A study by Ahuja et al. found that 30% of African Americans presented with life-threatening symptoms compared to only 26.8% of White patients when being treated for colon cancer.13 This study also revealed that in-hospital mortality was 4.2% for Blacks compared to only 3.7% for Whites.13 A study by Dou- beni et al. in cancer revealed 5-y survival for Black patients with colorectal cancer was decreased at 65% compared to White patients at 70%.14 In cardiac surgery, Black patients had a 1.7% incidence of renal failure requiring hemodialysis compared to 1% in White patients.15 When studying patients with severe aortic stenosis, Yeung et al. noted 53% of White patients received a valve compared to only 39% of Black Americans.16 Singh et al. found higher 30-d readmission rates for Blacks than Whites receiving a knee arthroplasty.17 Similar findings have been reported in breast cancer.18 Black patients were less likely to have a diagnostic evaluation within 30 d of a concerning physical examination or radiologic finding compared to Whites.18

Health disparities studies are relevant in endocrine surgery as well. A national database study with 16,878 patients found that Blacks had a higher overall complication rate at 4.9% compared to 3.8% in Whites after thyroidectomy.19 Adrenal surgery is also associated with disparities including less ac- cess to high-volume surgeons, greater length of hospital stay, and an increase in the complication rate.2º Our objective was

to determine if treatment and clinical outcomes of ACC varied by race and insurance status.

The National Cancer Database (NCDB) is a joint program of the American College of Surgeons and the American Cancer Society that provides standardized information on nearly all types of cancer. There is a specific dataset maintained for ACC. The NCDB includes overall survival (OS) but not disease specific survival. This database is useful for rare diseases such as ACC-provider hospital registry data from more than 1500 Commission on Cancer-accredited facilities. It’s data repre- sent more than 72% of newly diagnosed cancer cases in the United States and more than 40 million historical records.

Methods

The NCDB from 2004 to 2017 was queried for ACC patients using the primary site code C74.X and histology codes 8010, 8140, and 8370. Only patients aged 18 y and older were included. These were divided into nonmetastatic ACC (NM-ACC) and metastatic ACC (M-ACC) groups.

Race was defined as White versus minority (Black and His- panic). Insurance type was defined as private (PI) versus other (Medicaid/uninsured/unknown). Patients with Medicare were excluded in the analyses. Asian, Pacific Islander, and Native American are categorized in the NCDB. However, they were excluded from the final analyses due to a small sample size.

Results were summarized as frequency with percentage, mean with standard deviation, or median with interquartile range (IQR). Comparisons of descriptive statistics between patients were performed using Chi-squared test, Fisher’s exact test, Wilcoxon rank-sum test, and independent t-test as appropriate. The Kaplan-Meier method was used to compute median and 95% confidence interval OS. Multivariable Cox and logistic regression analyses were performed for NM-ACC and M-ACC patients to evaluate factors associated with OS and having their surgery. Covariates included age, gender, race, insurance, income level, Charlson Comorbidity Index, tumor size, facility volume, and metastatic disease. All of the statistical analyses were performed with SAS 9.4 software (SAS Institute, Cary, North Carolina) with a significance level of P < 0.05 and two-sided tests.21

Results

There were 3567 patients with ACC in our overall analysis. Two thousand three hundred and fifty one were NM-ACC, of whom 83.6% were White and 16.4% were minority (Table 1). There were 1216 M-ACC patients, of whom 80.3% were White and 19.8% were minority (Table 2). Both White NM-ACC and M-ACC patients were more likely to have PI (each P < 0.001)

(Tables 1 and 2). PI NM-ACC patients experienced a shorter median IQR duration from diagnosis to first treatment (0 [0-17] versus 0 [0-25] d, P = 0.005) (Table 3). NM-ACC and M-ACC patients with PI were each more likely to receive surgery
Table 1 - Characteristics of NM-ACC patients by race.
Patient charcteristicsNonmetastatic
AllWhiteBlack or HispanicP value
N (%)N (%)N (%)
Total patients23511966385-
Age [mean ± SD]57 ± 1657 ± 1653 ± 16<0.0001
Gender0.0002
Male952 (40.5)829 (42.2)123 (31.9)
Female1399 (59.5)1137 (57.8)262 (68.1)
Race<0.0001
White1966 (83.6)1966 (100)0 (0.0)
Black228 (9.7)0 (0.0)228 (59.2)
Hispanic157 (6.7)0 (0.0)157 (40.8)
Insurance<0.0001
Private1207 (51.3)1026 (52.2)181 (47)
Medicare784 (33.3)692 (35.2)92 (23.9)
Medicaid/Other government191 (8.1)135 (6.9)56 (14.5)
Unknown/Uninsured169 (7.2)113 (5.7)56 (14.5)
Income<0.0001
<$38,000342 (14.5)241 (12.3)101 (26.2)
$38,000-$62,9991077 (45.8)907 (46.1)170 (44.2)
≥$63,000716 (30.5)633 (32.2)83 (21.6)
Unknown216 (9.2)185 (9.4)31 (8.1)
Charlson comorbidity index0.6001
01706 (72.6)1434 (72.9)272 (70.6)
1461 (19.6)382 (19.4)79 (20.5)
≥2184 (7.8)150 (7.6)34 (8.8)
Facility type (patients >40 only)0.1939
Academic/Research1040 (52.1)871 (51.4)169 (56.1)
INCP229 (11.5)190 (11.2)39 (13.0)
CCCP615 (30.8)536 (31.6)79 (26.2)
CCP111 (5.6)97 (5.7)14 (4.7)
Tumor size0.4577
<5.0 cm298 (12.7)244 (12.4)54 (14.0)
5.0-9.9 cm821 (34.9)681 (34.6)140 (36.4)
≥10.0 cm1027 (43.7)863 (43.9)164 (42.6)
Unknown205 (8.7)178 (9.1)27 (7.0)
Days to first treatment [median (Q1-Q3)]0 (0-20)0 (0-19)0 (0-25)0.5678
Radiation335 (14.2)285 (14.5)50 (13.0)0.4385
Chemotherapy641 (27.3)550 (28.0)91 (23.6)0.0804
Radiation and chemotherapy168 (7.1)143 (7.3)25 (6.5)0.5868
Radiation or chemotherapy808 (34.4)692 (35.2)116 (30.1)0.0555
Lymph nodes examined443 (19.9)372 (20.0)71 (19.3)0.7600
Number of nodes examined [median (min-max)]0 (0-38)0 (0-37)0 (0-38)0.9444
Surgery2020 (85.9)1695 (86.2)325 (84.4)0.3531
Days to definitive surgery [median (Q1-Q3)]0 (0-19)0 (0-19)0 (0-22)0.6010
Follow-up, y [median (Q1-Q3)]2.3 (0.7-5.2)2.4 (0.7-5.3)2.2 (0.7-4.9)0.4936

(92.6% versus 86.9%, P = 0.001 and 35.4% versus 27%, P = 0.02 respectively) (Table 4). NM-ACC patients with PI also had a shorter median IQR interval from diagnosis to surgery ([0-16] versus. [0-20 d, P = 0.03]) (Table 3). M-ACC patients with PI were

Table 2 - Characteristics of M-ACC patients by race.
Patient charcteristicsMetastatic
AllWhiteBlack or HispanicP value
N (%)N (%)N (%)
Total patients1216976240-
Age [mean ± SD]56 ± 1657 ± 1653 ± 15<0.0001
Gender0.5452
Male511 (42.0)406 (41.6)105 (43.8)
Female705 (58.0)570 (58.4)135 (56.3)
Race<0.0001
White976 (80.3)976 (100)0 (0.0)
Black145 (11.9)0 (0.0)145 (60.4)
Hispanic95 (7.8)0 (0.0)95 (39.6)
Insurance<0.0001
Private568 (46.7)476 (48.8)92 (38.3)
Medicare392 (32.2)332 (34.0)60 (25.0)
Medicaid/Other government125 (10.3)80 (8.2)45 (18.8)
Unknown/Uninsured131 (10.8)88 (9.0)43 (17.9)
Income<0.0001
<$38,000218 (17.9)137 (14.0)81 (33.8)
$38,000-$62,999574 (47.2)469 (48.1)105 (43.8)
≥$63,000361 (29.7)317 (32.5)44 (18.3)
Unknown63 (5.2)53 (5.4)10 (4.2)
Charlson comorbidity index0.3332
0862 (70.9)701 (71.8)161 (67.1)
1238 (19.6)186 (19.1)52 (21.7)
≥2116 (9.5)89 (9.1)27 (11.3)
Facility type (patients ≥ 40 only)0.0024
Academic/Research466 (45.0)362 (42.8)104 (54.7)
INCP112 (10.8)87 (10.3)25 (13.2)
CCCP379 (36.6)331 (39.2)48 (25.3)
CCP78 (7.5)65 (7.7)13 (6.8)
Tumor size0.4862
<5.0 cm105 (8.6)89 (9.1)16 (6.7)
5.0-9.9 cm300 (24.7)245 (25.1)55 (22.9)
≥10.0 cm579 (47.6)460 (47.1)119 (49.6)
Unknown232 (19.1)182 (18.6)50 (20.8)
Days to first treatment [median (Q1-Q3)]19 (6-37)19 (6-37)25 (8-50)0.0041
Radiation160 (13.2)137 (14.0)23 (9.6)0.0675
Chemotherapy637 (52.4)512 (52.5)125 (52.1)0.9169
Radiation and chemotherapy94 (7.7)82 (8.4)12 (5.0)0.0771
Radiation or chemotherapy703 (57.8)567 (58.1)136 (56.7)0.6883
Lymph nodes examined129 (11.2)111 (12.1)18 (7.8)0.0670
Number of nodes examined [median (min-max)]0 (0-50)0 (0-50)0 (0-45)0.2402
Surgery359 (29.5)301 (30.8)58 (24.2)0.0423
Days to definitive surgery [median (Q1-Q3)]12 (0-38)13 (0-38)10 (0-36)0.7774
Follow-up, y [median (Q1-Q3)]0.3 (0.1-1.1)0.3 (0.1-1.1)0.4 (0.1-1.2)0.8570

more likely to receive chemotherapy (63.6% versus 54.3%, P = 0.01) and have lymph nodes examined (14.8% versus 8.6%, P = 0.02) than M-ACC patients without private insurance (Table 4).

Median length of stay postoperatively was shorter for White NM-ACC patients (6 versus 7 d, P = 0.04) and M- ACC patients (8 versus 17 d, P = 0.02) (Tables 1 and 2). For NM-ACC and M-ACC patients, the 30-d readmission,

Table 3 - Characteristics of NM-ACC patients by insurance type.
Patient charcteristicsNonmetastatic
Other*PrivateP value
N (%)N (%)
Total patients3601207-
Age [mean ± SD]49 ± 1450 ± 130.5308
Gender0.2046
Male153 (42.5)468 (38.8)
Female207 (57.5)739 (61.2)
Race<0.0001
White248 (68.9)1026 (85.0)
Black52 (14.4)115 (9.5)
Hispanic60 (16.7)66 (5.5)
Insurance<0.0001
Private0 (0.0)1207 (100)
Medicare0 (0.0)0 (0.0)
Medicaid/Other government191 (53.1)0 (0.0)
Unknown/Uninsured169 (46.9)0 (0.0)
Income<0.0001
<$38,00086 (23.9)139 (11.5)
$38,000-$62,999180 (50.0)525 (43.5)
≥$63,00072 (20.0)418 (34.6)
Unknown22 (6.1)125 (10.4)
Charlson comorbidity index0.1706
0276 (76.7)951 (78.8)
159 (16.4)202 (16.7)
≥225 (6.9)54 (4.5)
Tumor size<0.0001
<5.0 cm27 (7.5)162 (13.4)
5.0-9.9 cm121 (33.6)399 (33.1)
≥10.0 cm160 (44.4)573 (47.5)
Unknown52 (14.4)73 (6.0)
Days to first treatment [median (Q1-Q3)]0 (0-25)0 (0-17)0.0049
Radiation50 (13.9)188 (15.6)0.4338
Chemotherapy105 (29.2)407 (33.7)0.1060
Radiation and chemotherapy24 (6.7)113 (9.4)0.1121
Radiation or chemotherapy131 (36.4)482 (39.9)0.2264
Lymph nodes examined76 (22.4)247 (21.5)0.7366
Number of nodes examined [median (min-max)]0 (0-35)0 (0-38)0.7276
Surgery313 (86.9)1118 (92.6)0.0008
Days to definitive surgery [median (Q1-Q3)]0 (0-20)0 (0-16)0.0312
Follow-up, y [median (Q1-Q3)]2.3 (0.6-4.9)2.8 (1.0-6.0)0.0004

90-d mortality, and OS were similar with regard to race (Tables 1 and 2).

There was no difference in OS for all NM-ACC and for surgical NM-ACC patients with regard to race (Fig. 1A and B). There was also no difference for all M-ACC and for M-ACC patients receiving surgery (Fig. 2A and B).

A multivariable analysis showed that minorities (OR 0.69, 95% CI 0.54-0.88, P = 0.003) and patients without PI (OR 0.75, 95% CI 0.58-0.97, P = 0.03) were less likely to have surgery.

However, a multivariable analysis revealed survival was similar for White versus minority patients and those with PI versus other insurance types (Table 5).

Discussion

Health disparities are an important issue for surgical pa- tients in the United States. Poorer overall health and

Table 4 - Characteristics of M-ACC patients by insurance type.
Patient charcteristicsMetastatic
Other*PrivateP value
N (%)N (%)
Total patients256568-
Age [mean ± SD]47 ± 1451 ± 130.0002
Gender0.4064
Male112 (43.8)231 (40.7)
Female144 (56.3)337 (59.3)
Race<0.0001
White168 (65.6)476 (83.8)
Black41 (16.0)62 (10.9)
Hispanic47 (18.4)30 (5.3)
Insurance<0.0001
Private0 (0.0)568 (100)
Medicare0 (0.0)0 (0.0)
Medicaid/Other government125 (48.8)0 (0.0)
Unknown/Uninsured131 (51.2)0 (0.0)
Income0.0126
<$38,00057 (22.3)99 (17.4)
$38,000-$62,999130 (50.8)250 (44.0)
≥$63,00058 (22.7)180 (31.7)
Unknown11 (4.3)39 (6.9)
Charlson comorbidity index0.9551
0194 (75.8)430 (75.7)
144 (17.2)95 (16.7)
≥218 (7.0)43 (7.6)
Tumor size0.0120
<5.0 cm16 (6.3)44 (7.7)
5.0-9.9 cm54 (21.1)123 (21.7)
≥10.0 cm120 (46.9)309 (54.4)
Unknown66 (25.8)92 (16.2)
Days to first treatment [median (Q1-Q3)]21 (7-38)18 (6-37)0.2005
Radiation29 (11.3)78 (13.7)0.3420
Chemotherapy139 (54.3)361 (63.6)0.0118
Radiation and chemotherapy20 (7.8)50 (8.8)0.6370
Radiation or chemotherapy148 (57.8)389 (68.5)0.0029
Lymph nodes examined20 (8.6)80 (14.8)0.0184
Number of nodes examined [median (min-max)]0 (0-50)0 (0-23)0.0653
Surgery69 (27.0)201 (35.4)0.0170
Days to definitive surgery [median (Q1-Q3)]12 (0-40)10 (0-34)0.2539
Follow-up, y [median (Q1-Q3)]0.4 (0.1-1.2)0. (0.2-1.4)0.1461

decreased life span based on race or ethnicity are multi- factorial.22,23 Minority status and insurance may predispose patients to lower quality or reduced access to healthcare, including restrictions to providers who do not accept Medicaid.24,25 Studying these factors associated with health disparities may lead to improved outcomes in the future by identifying differences in care provided to people who have the same disease.

While this study revealed significant differences in care, OS was similar. This suggests that the altered care patterns did not translate to differences associated with decreased sur- vival. Hammad et al. at the Medical College of Wisconsin also found that while ACC care varied by race, this was not inde- pendently associated with decreased survival in ACC.26 Age >55 y and comorbidities were associated with decrease sur- vival, while race was not.26

A

Product-Limit Survival Estimates With Number of Subjects at Risk

1.0

0.8

Survival Probability

0.6

0.4

0.2

0.0

1

385

207

124

71

41

22

2

1966

1080

669

421

254

142

0

2

4

6

8

10

Years

Race

1: Black or Hispanic

2: White

Fig. 1 - (A) Kaplan-Meier survival curve of all NM-ACC patients with no difference by race (P = 0.967). (B) Kaplan-Meier survival curve of surgical NM-ACC patients with no difference by race (P = 0.539).

B

Product-Limit Survival Estimates With Number of Subjects at Risk

1.0

0.8

Survival Probability

0.6

0.4

0.2

0.0

1

325

192

114

64

36

19

2

1695

1024

644

407

246

138

0

2

4

6

8

10

Years

Race

1: Black or Hispanic

2: White

Disparities in healthcare have multiple causes including socioeconomic standing, insurance status, access to care, health literacy, language, and cultural differences. Length- of-stay differences by race despite no difference in tumor

size or comorbidities may suggest the higher income in White patients that may play a role in discharge after sur- gery. Even when these differences do not translate into sig- nificant decreases in OS, further study is needed to better

A

Product-Limit Survival Estimates With Number of Subjects at Risk

1.0

0.8

Survival Probability

0.6

0.4

0.2

0.0

1

240

37

12

2

1

0

2

976

133

56

27

15

7

0

2

4

6

8

10

Years

Race

1: Black or Hispanic

2: White

Fig. 2 - (A) Kaplan-Meier survival curve of all M-ACC patients with no difference by race (P = 0.715). (B) Kaplan-Meier survival curve of surgical M-ACC patients with no difference by race (P = 0.817).

B

Product-Limit Survival Estimates With Number of Subjects at Risk

1.0

0.8

Survival Probability

0.6

0.4

0.2

0.0

1

58

18

4

0

2

301

81

35

16

7

3

0

2

4

6

8

10

Years

Race

1: Black or Hispanic

2: White

understand trends in healthcare including diagnosis, time to first treatment being offered, use of surgery, and multimodal care.

While our study revealed that having PI was an important factor with regard to care offered to patients, the inability to detect a difference in OS may relate to ACC. This disease is

Table 5 - Multivariable survival and logistic regression analysis.
Patient charcteristicsSurvivalSurgery
HR (95% CI)P valueOR (95% CI)P value
Age
40-54 versus 18-391.34 (1.20-1.50)<0.00010.70 (0.55-0.90)0.0047
55-69 versus 18-391.86 (1.60-2.16)<0.00010.31 (0.22-0.43)<0.0001
≥70 versus 18-390.95 (0.82-1.09)0.45201.19 (0.87-1.63)0.2759
Gender, male versus female1.10 (1.01-1.19)0.03650.81 (0.67-0.97)0.0257
Race, Black, or Hispanic versus White0.98 (0.88-1.10)0.78830.69 (0.54-0.88)0.0029
Insurance
Other versus Private1.11 (0.98-1.25)0.10820.75 (0.58-0.97)0.0302
Medicare versus Private1.20 (1.07-1.36)0.00300.74 (0.57-0.96)0.0236
Income
$38,000-$62,999 versus < $38,0000.98 (0.87-1.11)0.74311.22 (0.94-1.59)0.1300
≥$63,000 versus < $38,0000.91 (0.80-1.04)0.18241.04 (0.78-1.37)0.8092
Unknown versus < $38,0000.49 (0.39-0.62)<0.00011.97 (1.27-3.05)0.0026
Charlson comorbidity index
1 versus 01.33 (1.19-1.47)<0.00010.85 (0.67-1.07)0.1655
≥2 versus 01.60 (1.38-1.85)<0.00010.71 (0.52-0.97)0.0335
Tumor size
5.0-9.9 versus < 5.0 cm1.25 (1.07-1.45)0.00531.02 (0.74-1.40)0.9061
≥10.0 versus < 5.0 cm1.30 (1.12-1.50)0.00061.41 (1.03-1.93)0.0298
Unknown versus < 5.0 cm1.71 (1.43-2.03)<0.00010.22 (0.15-0.32)<0.0001
Facility volume, high versus Low0.84 (0.76-0.92)0.00032.09 (1.68-2.61)<0.0001
Metastatic disease, yes versus no3.81 (3.48-4.17)<0.00010.05 (0.04-0.06)<0.0001

rare and associated with poor prognosis. Therefore, it may be difficult to detect a survival difference even when care is different because its prognosis is so poor and few institutions see this disease with any frequency.

Limitations of our study include its retrospective design, relatively short follow-up, missing database values, coding errors, or changes in coding practices during course of this study. In addition, rates for surgical management for patients with metastatic ACC may be inflated. Surgical site codes in the NCDB are not specific to ACC. Cases with local tumor excision and surgery, not otherwise specified were included. About 90% of metastatic ACC patients with surgery had codes for simple, total, or radical surgery. However, this limitation of the database could not be directly controlled and may lead to data suggestion overtreatment of metastatic ACC.

Conclusions

There are differences in care based on race and insurance status. Patients with private insurance and White race with NM-ACC or M-ACC were both more likely to receive surgery and timely multimodality care. However, these disparities were not associated with differences in 90-d mortality or OS.

Author Contributions

All authors contributed significantly to this manuscript. A.H., E.M., A.K., A.W., R.P., and T.M.Y. contributed to study design.

S.H. and K.K. contributed to data analysis. S.H., E.M., R.P., and T.M.Y. contributed to editing and final review.

Disclosure

None declared.

Funding

None.

Meeting Presentation

Society of Asian Academic Surgeons; Chicago, IL; September 25-27, 2021.

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