| Literature DB >> 35924186 |
Sumarth K Mehta1, Tahreem Mir1, Isaac G Freedman1, Amar H Sheth1, Soshian Sarrafpour1, Ji Liu1, Christopher C Teng1.
Abstract
Purpose: Acute primary angle closure (APAC) is an ophthalmologic emergency. Nationwide data on the epidemiology and clinical characteristics of APAC are lacking despite the associated visual morbidity. Patients andEntities:
Keywords: cost; demographics; glaucoma; incidence; seasonality
Year: 2022 PMID: 35924186 PMCID: PMC9342660 DOI: 10.2147/OPTH.S368453
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Clin Ophthalmol ISSN: 1177-5467
Demographic and Baseline Characteristics
| na | |
|---|---|
| National estimate of ED presentations of APAC, total 2008‒2017 | 23203 (100%) |
| Median age (years) | 60 |
| Mean age (SD) (years) | 58.76 (16.15) |
| Year | |
| 2008 | 1777 (7.7%) |
| 2009 | 1762 (7.6%) |
| 2010 | 1860 (8%) |
| 2011 | 2375 (10.2%) |
| 2012 | 2195 (9.5%) |
| 2013 | 2521 (10.9%) |
| 2014 | 2351 (10.1%) |
| 2015 | 2575 (11.1%) |
| 2016 | 3006 (13%) |
| 2017 | 2781 (12%) |
| Age groups | |
| <40 | 2843 (12.3%) |
| 40‒49 | 3278 (14.1%) |
| 50‒59 | 5485 (23.6%) |
| 60‒69 | 5599 (24.1%) |
| 70‒79 | 3656 (15.8%) |
| 80+ | 2341 (10.1%) |
| Sex | |
| Male | 9417 (40.6%) |
| Female | 13786 (59.4%) |
| Region | |
| Northeast | 5166 (22.3%) |
| Midwest | 4141 (17.8%) |
| South | 7910 (34.1%) |
| West | 5985 (25.8%) |
| Insurance type | |
| Medicare | 8398 (36.2%) |
| Medicaid | 3999 (17.2%) |
| Private | 6148 (26.5%) |
| Self-pay | 3532 (15.2%) |
| Other or no charge | 1126 (4.9%) |
| Median annual household income quartile | |
| 0‒25th percentile | 6983 (30.1%) |
| 26‒50th percentile | 5518 (23.8%) |
| 51‒75th percentile | 5433 (23.4%) |
| 76‒100th percentile | 4708 (20.3%) |
| No data | 561 (2.4%) |
| Hospital teaching status | |
| Metropolitan non-teaching | 6747 (29.1%) |
| Metropolitan teaching | 14482 (62.4%) |
| Nonmetropolitan hospital | 1974 (8.5%) |
| Trauma level designation | |
| Not a trauma center | 9995 (43.1%) |
| Level I | 5922 (25.5%) |
| Level II | 2300 (9.9%) |
| Level III | 1720 (7.4%) |
| No data | 3265 (14.1%) |
| Patient disposition | |
| Treated and released | 18077 (77.9%) |
| Transferred to short-term hospital | 2137 (9.2%) |
| Transferred to non-hospital facility | 770 (3.3%) |
| Admitted to same hospital | 1635 (7.0%) |
| Other/no data | 584 (2.6%) |
| Had inpatient stay | 1462 (6.3%) |
| Median length of stay if admitted (days) | 2 |
| Weekend ED admission | 7633 (32.9%) |
Note: aAll values are weighted to create a nationally representative estimate and rounded to the nearest whole number.
Figure 1Total ED Presentations and Incidences within Age Groups. Caption: The total number of ED presentations declined in the oldest age groups, but incidence continued to increase.
Figure 2(A) National and (B) Regional Annual Incidence of APAC as Primary ED Diagnosis. Caption: The incidence of APAC in the United States increased in the years from 2008 to 2017 (A). The dashed line represents a significant regression analysis (slope = 0.04 cases per 100,000 individuals per year, p<0.01). Additionally, variation in the incidence of APAC was observed across the four geographic regions of the United States (B).
Figure 3Seasonal Variation in the National Incidence of APAC as Primary ED Diagnosis. Caption: Significant seasonal variation exists in the national incidence of APAC (p<0.01) at the National level (A) and regional levels (Northeast, South, Midwest, West, (B). The blue bars represent mean monthly incidence over the study period, while the black dots and lines depict year-to-year variation from 2008 to 2017. Seasonal effects vary across geographic regions.
Figure 4Trends in inflation-adjusted total annual charges and median charges per encounter for ED Visits with APAC as primary diagnosis, inflation adjusted total annual charges (A) and inflation adjusted median charge (B).