Compared with White and male patients, Asian, Black, Hispanic, and female critically ill patients were significantly less likely to undergo arterial blood gas testing (e.g., Black vs White OR 0.859).
Observational (n=184,178)
Yes
Are there disparities in arterial blood gas testing by race and sex among critically ill patients?
184,178 ICU admissions from 2001 to 2019 across 161 U.S. hospitals, 45.7% female, 78.1% White, 16.5% Black, 3.5% Hispanic or Latino, 1.9% Asian.
Arterial blood gas (ABG) testing
White patients (for race comparison) and male patients (for sex comparison)
ABG test incidence, time to first test, and frequency of subsequent tests
Asian, Black, and female critically ill patients experience significantly reduced and delayed rates of arterial blood gas testing compared to White and male patients, potentially exacerbating hidden hypoxemia.
Effect estimate: OR 0.859 (95% CI 0.830-0.888)
Abstract Rationale Pulse oximetry accuracy varies across races, underscoring the importance of routine arterial blood gas (ABG) testing, the gold standard for assessing oxygen saturation. Objectives This study aimed to assess disparities in ABG testing among critically ill patients by race and sex. Methods Records from 2001 to 2019 in 161 U.S. hospitals were analyzed, including Duke, MIMIC-III (Medical Information Mart for Intensive Care), MIMIC-IV, and the eICU Collaborative Research Database. The study evaluated ABG test incidence; time to first test; and frequency of subsequent tests, adjusting for confounders, including the Sequential Organ Failure Assessment, hospital, and age. Subgroup analyses focused on patients with arterial lines and mechanical ventilation. Measurements and Main Results The cohort included 184,178 ICU admissions (35.0% with ABG test results; 1.9% Asian, 16.5% Black, 3.5% Hispanic or Latino, 78.1% White, 45.7% female). Compared with White patients, Asian, Black, and Hispanic or Latino patients were less likely to have an ABG test (odds ratio OR 95% confidence interval (CI), 0.807 0.741, 0.879; 0.859 0.830, 0.888; 0.919 0.865, 0.976, respectively), experienced delays to initial ABG testing (hazard ratio HR 95% CI, Asian, 0.855 0.803, 0.911; Black, 0.833 0.814, 0.853; P 0.001), and were less likely to have repeated ABG tests (incidence rate ratio 95% CI, Asian 0.913 0.845, 0.986; Black 0.913 0.887, 0.940). Compared with male patients, female patients underwent fewer ABG tests (OR 95% CI, 0.926 0.905, 0.948), had delays in initial testing (HR 95% CI, 0.958 0.942, 0.974), and had fewer repeated ABG tests (incidence rate ratio 95% CI, 0.951 (0.931, 0.971)). These findings were consistent among patients who were mechanically ventilated and had arterial lines placed. Conclusions Asian, Black, and female patients had significantly reduced and delayed rates of ABG testing. Inequitable ABG testing may exacerbate the prevalence of hidden hypoxemia. Until skin tone–corrected pulse oximeters are available, equitable ABG testing remains the best strategy to mitigate hidden hypoxemia.
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João Matos
Mahmoud Alwakeel
Sicheng Hao
Duke University
American Journal of Respiratory and Critical Care Medicine
Harvard University
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Duke University
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Matos et al. (Mon,) conducted a observational in Critically ill patients (n=184,178). Asian, Black, Hispanic or Latino race, and female sex vs. White race and male sex was evaluated on ABG test incidence (OR 0.859, 95% CI 0.830-0.888). Compared with White and male patients, Asian, Black, Hispanic, and female critically ill patients were significantly less likely to undergo arterial blood gas testing (e.g., Black vs White OR 0.859).
synapsesocial.com/papers/6a11bed21bf00cafc0178ac3 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1164/rccm.202406-1242oc