Neighborhood Socioeconomic Status and New Hidradenitis Suppurativa Diagnoses in a Single Health System
Clinical Summary
View sourceWhat was studied
A cross-sectional analysis of dermatology patients in a single health system (San Francisco Bay Area residents; Aug 1, 2019–May 31, 2024) examined whether neighborhood socioeconomic status (census tract nSES quintiles) was associated with new hidradenitis suppurativa (HS) diagnoses using logistic regression with GEE adjusted for age, sex, and race/ethnicity.
Key findings
Among 65,766 patients, 485 (0.7%) had a new HS diagnosis. Compared with the highest nSES quintile (Q5), adjusted odds of new HS were higher in lower nSES quintiles: Q1 OR 3.32 (95% CI, 2.46–4.49), Q2 2.25 (1.62–3.12), Q3 1.97 (1.46–2.66), Q4 1.44 (1.06–1.96); P<.001 for linear trend. Race-stratified patterns were similar but not statistically significant at the 5% level in all groups.
Study limitations
Cross-sectional design in a single health system limits causal inference and generalizability. Race-stratified analyses did not reach statistical significance in all racial and ethnic groups.
Clinical implications
Patients from lower-SES neighborhoods had higher adjusted odds of receiving a new HS diagnosis in this health system. Consider neighborhood context when assessing HS risk and planning clinic outreach.
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