4.6 Article

Sex differences in patient journeys to diagnosis, referral, and surgical treatment of trigeminal neuralgia: implications for equitable care

Journal

JOURNAL OF NEUROSURGERY
Volume 139, Issue 8, Pages 463-471

Publisher

AMER ASSOC NEUROLOGICAL SURGEONS
DOI: 10.3171/2022.11.JNS221191

Keywords

trigeminal neuralgia; chronic neuropathic pain; facial pain; patient journey; sex differences; Gamma Knife radiosurgery; functional neurosurgery; stereotactic radiosurgery

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This study investigated sex differences in patients' journeys to diagnosis, referral, and treatment of trigeminal neuralgia (TN) and found that females experienced significantly longer referral timelines and reported higher pain intensity at referral than males. The study also revealed that the referral time for medically tolerant females was significantly longer than that for medically tolerant males. These findings highlight the presence of unconscious bias and discrimination against females in TN treatment referral, emphasizing the need for expedited referral for female TN patients.
OBJECTIVE Trigeminal neuralgia (TN) is an orofacial pain disorder that is more prevalent in females than males. Although an increasing number of studies point to sex differences in chronic pain, how sex impacts TN patients' journeys to care has not been previously addressed. This study sought to investigate sex differences in patients' journeys to diagnosis, referral, and treatment of TN within a large national context. METHODS Patients with classic TN (n = 100; 50 females and 50 males) were randomly selected through chart reviews at the largest surgical treatment center for TN in Canada for a cross-sectional study. Statistical tests, including Welch's t-test, the chi-square test, Pearson's correlations, and analyses of covariance, were conducted with Python. RESULTS Key discrepancies between sexes in access to care were identified. Females had a significantly longer referral time interval (average 53.2 months vs 20.4 months, median 27.5 months vs 11.0 months, p = 0.018) and total time interval (average 121.1 months vs 67.8 months, median 78.0 months vs 45.2 months, p = 0.018) than males, despite reporting higher pain intensity at referral. Although medically intolerant patients had a significantly shorter referral time interval than medically tolerant patients (average 13.0 months vs 41.0 months, median 6.0 months vs 17.0 months, p < 0.001), medically tolerant females had a significantly longer referral time interval than medically tolerant males (average 59.9 months vs 21.7 months, median 30.0 months vs 12.0 months, p = 0.017). No statistically significant differences were detected between the sexes for diagnostic time interval (average 63.3 months vs 43.0 months, median 24.0 months vs 24.0 months, p = 0.263) or treatment time interval (average 4.6 months vs 4.7 months, median 4.0 months vs 3.0 months, p = 0.986). CONCLUSIONS Critical sex differences in patients' journeys to TN surgical treatment were identified, with females enduring considerably longer referral timelines and expressing significantly greater pain intensity than males at referral. Taken together, our findings suggest the presence of unconscious bias and discrimination against females and highlight the need for expediting TN treatment referral for female TN patients.

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