• Skip to main content
  • Skip to header right navigation
  • Skip to site footer

  • Twitter
  • YouTube
NASBS

NASBS

North American Skull Base Society

  • Home
  • About
    • Mission Statement
    • Bylaws
    • NASBS Board of Directors
    • Committees
      • Committee Interest Form
    • NASBS Policy
    • Donate Now to the NASBS
    • Contact Us
  • Industry
    • Exhibits and Support & Visibility Opportunities
    • Industry Archives
  • Meetings
    • 2026 Annual Meeting
    • Abstracts
      • 2026 Call for Abstracts
      • NASBS Poster Archives
      • 2025 Abstract Awards
    • 2025 Recap
    • NASBS Summer Course
    • Meetings Archive
    • Other Skull Base Surgery Educational Events
  • Resources
    • Member Survey Application
    • NASBS Travel Scholarship Program
    • Research Grants
    • Fellowship Registry
    • The Rhoton Collection
    • Webinars
      • Research Committee Workshop Series
      • ARS/AHNS/NASBS Sinonasal Webinar
      • Surgeon’s Log
      • Advancing Scholarship Series
      • Trials During Turnover: Webinar Series
    • NASBS iCare Pathway Resources
    • Billing & Coding White Paper
  • Membership
    • Join NASBS
    • Membership Directory
    • Multidisciplinary Teams of Distinction
    • NASBS Mentorship Program
  • Fellowship Match
    • NASBS Neurosurgery Skull Base Fellowship Match Programs
    • NASBS Neurosurgery Skull Base Fellowship Match Application
  • Journal
  • Login/Logout

2025 Proffered Presentations

2025 Proffered Presentations

 

← Back to Previous Page

 

S058: RACIAL AND SOCIOECONOMIC DISPARITIES IN TREATMENT OUTCOMES AND SURVIVAL AMONG SKULL BASE CHORDOMA AND CHONDROSARCOMA PATIENTS: A U.S. POPULATION-BASED STUDY
Lily H Kim, MD; John Choi, MD; Jonathan B Lamano, MD, PhD; Juan C Fernandez-Miranda, MD; Stanford University

Introduction: Skull base chordoma and chondrosarcoma are rare osseous tumors. Due to their low incidence, the impact of racial and socioeconomic factors on treatment outcomes and survival of these patients is not well understood. Utilizing the National Cancer Institute’s population-based tumor registry SEER (Surveillance, Epidemiology, and End Results) database, we aimed to analyze nationwide patterns in clinical outcomes for chordoma and chondrosarcoma.

Methods: Data were extracted from the SEER records (1992-2021), focusing on demographics, time to treatment, and survival for patients with skull base chordoma and chondrosarcoma. Statistical analyses were performed to identify disparities in treatment initiation and survival outcomes.

Results: The study population comprised 562 patients, 348 (61.9%) with chordoma and 214 (38.1%) with chondrosarcoma. Racial distribution included White (n=332), Hispanic (n=113), Asian (n=82), Black (n=25), and Native American (n=4) patients. White (51.9±17.3 years) and Native American (49.3±13.8 years) patients were older than Asian (47.4±17.6 years), Black (43.2±15.7 years), and Hispanic (44.5 ± 15.1 years) patients. White (86.1%), Asian (95.1%), and Hispanic (91.2%) patients were more likely to receive surgery than their Black (64.0%) and Native American (50.0%) counterparts. Tumor size (P=0.22), grade (P=0.84), and stage (P=0.10) were similar across different racial groups. No significant difference in the extent of resection (local excision/biopsy versus subtotal resection versus gross total resection) was observed among different racial groups who underwent surgery (P=0.88).

A multivariate regression analysis revealed significant delays in treatment initiation and differences in survival based on racial background. When adjusted for age, sex, stage, tumor size, marital status, income, rural-urban environment, and education level, Black patients with chordoma or chondrosarcoma were more likely to have a longer duration of time between diagnosis and treatment (adjusted coefficient: 54.6, P=0.04). White race (adjusted coefficient: -23.44, P=0.03) predicted shorter time to treatment among patients with chondrosarcoma but not in the chordoma-only cohort. Across both tumor types, predictors of decreased survival included older age (adjusted coefficient: -1.6, P<0.001), lower education level (adjusted coefficient: -20.4, P=0.02), and larger tumor size (adjusted coefficient: -0.45, P=0.05). White race (adjusted coefficient: 30.1, P=0.003) and higher median household income (adjusted coefficient: 2.4, P=0.02), on the other hand, predicted longer survival. For chordoma, younger age (adjusted coefficient: -1.18, P<0.001), white race (adjusted coefficient: 27.44, P=0.02), and higher education level (adjusted coefficient: -31.64, P=0.003) predicted longer survival. For chondrosarcoma, significant predictors of a longer survival were age (adjusted coefficient: -2.30, P<0.001) and median household income (adjusted coefficient: 4.89, P=0.02).

Conclusions: This population-based study highlights significant racial and socioeconomic disparities in the treatment and survival outcomes of patients with skull base chordoma and chondrosarcoma. Black patients experienced greater delays in treatment initiation. White race and higher income were predictors of longer survival while older age and lower education level predicted decreased survival. Addressing these disparities will require targeted interventions to ensure timely treatment and equitable care for all patient groups.

 

← Back to Previous Page

Copyright © 2025 North American Skull Base Society · Managed by BSC Management, Inc · All Rights Reserved