Table 1.
Characteristic | Preintervention patients (n = 639) | Postintervention patients (n = 300) | P value* |
Age, no. (%) | .03 | ||
<70 y | 465 (73) | 238 (79) | |
≥70 y | 174 (27) | 62 (21) | |
Insurance type, no. (%) | .04 | ||
Commercial | 297 (46) | 164 (55) | |
Medicaid | 121 (19) | 57 (19) | |
Medicare | 179 (28) | 69 (23) | |
No insurance | 42 (7) | 10 (3) | |
Race†, no. (%) | <.001 | ||
White | 307 (48) | 172 (57) | |
Black | 136 (21) | 56 (19) | |
Hispanic | 103 (16) | 56 (19) | |
Asian | 28 (4) | 11 (4) | |
Unknown | 65 (10) | 5 (2) | |
Comorbidity ≥1, no. (%) | 130 (20) | 82 (27) | .02 |
Breast cancer stage, no. (%) | .04 | ||
IA | 92 (14) | 55 (18) | |
IB | 255 (40) | 116 (39) | |
IIA | 213 (33) | 79 (26) | |
IIB | 79 (12) | 50 (17) | |
Surgery type, no. (%) | .05 | ||
Mastectomy | 243 (38) | 94 (31) | |
Breast-conserving surgery | 396 (62) | 206 (69) | |
Used tertiary referral center, no. (%) | 483 (76) | 224 (75) | .76 |
Cases per surgeon, median (range) | 6 (1–78) | 6 (1–47) | .94 |
Categorical variables were tested with the chi-square test, continuous variables with the t test, and medians with the Wilcoxon test.
There were no statistically significant differences between the ratio of black and Hispanic vs white and Asian women in the pre- vs postintervention patient populations (P = .67).