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. 2024 May 2;102(3):179–194. doi: 10.1159/000538748

Table 1.

Study characteristics of included articles

Author Country Number of DBS patients Gender Mean age, years Most represented races Disparity studied Disparity observed Proposed rationale
Shpiner et al. [6] 2019 USA (FL) 207 referred, 100 (48.3%) received surgery Male: 75.8% Male: 65.0 Caucasian: 83% Gender Women are less likely to receive DBS due to preference Decreased preoperative education for women
Female: 24.2% Female: 65.3 African American: 4.8%
Unknown: 4.8%
Watanabe et al. [7] 2022 USA (HI) 74 Male: 66.22% N/A White: 43.24% AA and NHPI utilization of DBS NHPI and black PD patients underrepresented. All NHPI receiving DBS were male Lack of access to care in underserved minorities leading to earlier mortality
Female: 33.78% AA: 45.95%
Jost et al. [8] 2022 France 316 referred Male: 67% Male: 62.0 N/A Gender Fewer women underwent DBS assessment than expected, fewer referrals from physicians Nonclinical factors such as referral biases, greater fear of surgery, or socioeconomic status
190 (83.0%) received surgery Female: 33% Female: 62.7
Dalrymple et al. [9] 2019 USA (VA) 137 Male: 69.3% Male: 63.3 N/A Gender Women were less likely to receive DBS for medication refractory tremor Male preference for surgery or clinician bias leading to fewer referrals for women
Female: 330.7% Female: 63.3
Crispo et al. [10] 2020 Canada 260 Male: 74.6% 64.4 N/A Age Patients living in areas with a large minority population are less likely to receive DBS surgery Differences in access to care, health-seeking behavior, or need for DBS
Female: 25.4%
Chan et al. [11] 2014 USA 18,312 Male: 67.53% 63.66 White: 85.71% African American access to DBS African Americans with PD are 8 times less likely to undergo DBS relative to white patients Medicaid reliance amongst black patients, access to care, or cultural biases
Hispanic: 7.71%
Female: 32.47% Asian/PI: 2.50%
African American: 0.86%
Skelton et al. [12] 2023 USA (GA) 209 referred (Referrals) 64.1 (Referrals) Utilization of DBS by black patients Underutilization of DBS by black patients post-referral Disparities occur in the time between medical management and surgical evaluation, driven by lack of patient follow-up
Male: 73.2% White: 84.7%
Asian: 6.2%
171 (81.8%) received surgery Female: 26.8% Black: 4.8%
Hispanic: 4.3%
Willis et al. [13] 2014 USA 8,420 Male: 59.3% Medicaid patients (>65) White: 94.9% Demographic, clinical, SES, and physician practice factors Greatest disparities are associated with race: black and Asian patients were less likely to receive DBS than white patients. High neighborhood SES associated with greater odds of receiving DBS Multidisciplinary care is not accessible in low-income areas. Lack of referrals in areas with a high minority population
Unknown: 0.12%
Female: 40.7% Hispanic: 1.7%
Black: 1.0%
Vinke et al. [14] 2022 Netherlands, Slovenia 121 Male: 64.5% N/A N/A Gender Women have a greater chance of undergoing DBS when an asleep MRI or CT guided method is available Increased anxiety about surgery among women may make asleep operations more tolerable
Female: 35.5%
Chandran et al. [15] 2014 India 51 Male: 62.7% Male: 55.8 N/A Gender Women equally likely to undergo DBS Financial considerations are main limitation for surgery in this population
Female: 37.3% Female: 54.5
Cramer et al. [16] 2022 USA 50,837 Male: 68% 64.3 White: 84.9% Race and SES Black patients were 5 times less likely to undergo DBS than white patients. Female patients were also less likely to receive DBS than males Systemic factors such as unconscious/conscious bias
Female: 32% Other: 13.8%
Black: 1.3%
Deuel et al. [22] 2023 USA 6,952 Male: 69.5% Male: 65.2 N/A Gender Both national and local data were consistent with a gender disparity Women with PD are more likely to live alone and more likely to have concerns over side effects
Female: 30.5% Female: 65.5
Sarica et al. [17] 2023 Canada 8,655 Male: 69.5% 65.1 White: 85.0% Gender Female and black patients are less likely to undergo DBS. Increasing SES is a positive predictor for DBS use Biases both at the initial screening stage and during the assessment for surgery
Hispanic: 6.8%
African: 1.8% Race
Female: 30.5% Asian: 2.6%
Native American: 0.4% SES
Other: 3.4%