skip to main content

Black patients more likely to get emergency colorectal cancer surgery

Date Visible: 
12/26/2022 - 1:00pm

Media contact: Mary Clare Fischer, 734-764-2220 |  Patients may contact Cancer AnswerLine 800-865-1125

Emergency surgery was linked to less thorough pre-surgical assessments and worse outcomes after surgery.

An artistic rendering of a surgical tableJacob Dwyer, Justine Ross, Michigan Medicine

In an analysis of data from hospitals across the state of Michigan, University of Michigan researchers found that Black, non-Hispanic patients were more likely to undergo emergency surgery for colorectal cancer than other races and ethnicities.

Undergoing emergency surgery was associated with a higher rate of complications, including death. Out of close to 5,000 patients who underwent any type of surgery for colorectal cancer, 23% had emergency surgery — but those patients made up 63% of the deaths.

Patients who underwent emergency surgery also received less complete evaluations and testing as part of their workup by surgeons and their medical teams.

“Overall, these results suggest that racial and ethnic differences persist in presentation and management of colorectal cancer and that these differences likely contribute to disparities in postoperative outcomes among these groups,” said Ryan Howard, M.D., M.S., a general surgery resident at University of Michigan Health and the first author of the study.

Howard and his research team used data from the Michigan Surgical Quality Collaborative, a statewide initiative funded by Blue Cross Blue Shield of Michigan that aims to improve the quality and cost of surgical care across the state.

Their goal was to identify opportunities to improve patient care earlier in the process of cancer diagnosis and treatment.

“We can spend all day working on, say, reducing complications right after surgery,” Howard said. “But if we’re still not getting the right treatment to the right patient at the right time, then we’re not doing a good enough job.”

“Colorectal cancer is universally screened for and develops fairly slowly. So if someone is plugged into the health care system, the chances are very high that we will detect it and they will get the appropriate evaluation and work-up,” he added. “The fact that we found patients who are not getting that suggests that there is an opportunity to improve the care we deliver to patients, even before they get to the surgical episode.”

Howard points to patient navigators and targeted community outreach as proven strategies to help reduce disparities in cancer care and believes the state of Michigan, with its network of collaborative quality initiatives, is well positioned to incorporate these solutions into future projects.

Howard was the creative director for Annals of Surgery, where this study was published, but was not involved in the review process for this paper.

Paper cited: “Racial and Ethnic Differences in Elective vs. Emergency Surgery for Colorectal Cancer,” Annals of Surgery. DOI: 10.1097/SLA.0000000000005667