1. Sex and Race Differences in Cardiac Sarcoidosis Presentation, Treatment and Outcomes.
- Author
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Duvall C, Pavlovic N, Rosen NS, Wand AL, Griffin JM, Okada DR, Tandri H, Kasper EK, Sharp M, Chen ES, Chrispin J, and Gilotra NA
- Subjects
- Male, Female, Humans, Race Factors, Retrospective Studies, Arrhythmias, Cardiac, Treatment Outcome, Heart Failure diagnosis, Heart Failure therapy, Heart Failure etiology, Cardiomyopathies diagnosis, Cardiomyopathies drug therapy, Sarcoidosis diagnosis, Sarcoidosis drug therapy, Sarcoidosis epidemiology, Myocarditis complications
- Abstract
Background: Although sex- and race-based patterns have been described in the extracardiac organ involvement of sarcoidosis, cardiac sarcoidosis (CS)-specific studies are lacking., Methods: We studied CS presentation, treatment and outcomes based on sex and race in a tertiary-center cohort. Multivariable adjusted Cox proportional hazards and survival analyses were performed for primary composite outcomes (left ventricular assist device, heart transplantation, all-cause death) and for secondary outcomes (ventricular arrhythmia and all-cause death., Results: We identified 252 patients with CS (108 female, 109 Black). At presentation with CS, females vs males (P = 0.001) and Black vs White individuals (P = 0.001) more commonly had symptomatic heart failure (HF), with HF most common in Black females (ANOVA P < 0.001). Treatment differences included more corticosteroid use (90% vs 79%; P = 0.020), higher 1-year prednisone dosage (13 vs 10 mg; P = 0.003) and less frequent early steroid-sparing agent use in males (29% vs 40%; P = 0.05). Black participants more frequently received a steroid-sparing agent (75% vs 60%; P = 0.023). Composite outcome-free survival did not differ by sex or race. Male sex had an adjusted hazard ratio of 2.34 (95% CI 1.13, 4.80; P = 0.021) for ventricular arrhythmia., Conclusion: CS course may differ by sex and race and may contribute to distinct clinical CS phenotypes., Competing Interests: Disclosures The authors have no relevant disclosures., (Copyright © 2023 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2023
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