1. Accessibility to Reperfusion Therapy Among Women with Acute Myocardial Infarction: Impact on Hospital Mortality.
- Author
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de-Miguel-Balsa, Eva, Latour-Pérez, Jaime, Baeza-Román, Anna, Llamas-Álvarez, Ana, Ruiz-Ruiz, Javier, and Fuset-Cabanes, Ma Paz
- Subjects
MYOCARDIAL infarction treatment ,TREATMENT of acute coronary syndrome ,CARDIOVASCULAR surgery ,CONFIDENCE intervals ,HEALTH services accessibility ,LONGITUDINAL method ,MYOCARDIAL reperfusion ,MYOCARDIAL revascularization ,SEX distribution ,STATISTICS ,THROMBOLYTIC therapy ,TRANSLUMINAL angioplasty ,DATA analysis ,RETROSPECTIVE studies ,SEVERITY of illness index ,RECEIVER operating characteristic curves ,HOSPITAL mortality ,KAPLAN-Meier estimator ,TREATMENT delay (Medicine) ,ODDS ratio ,MANN Whitney U Test ,KRUSKAL-Wallis Test - Abstract
Background: The available evidence about the effect of gender and/or sex on mortality differences is contradictory. Our aim is to assess the impact of gender on the access to reperfusion therapy in patients with acute coronary syndrome with ST-segment elevation (STEMI), and secondly, to analyze the effect of delay on the differences with regard to hospital mortality. Methods: A retrospective cohort study was conducted among consecutive patients with STEMI included in the ARIAM-SEMICYUC registry (2010-2013). Results: A total of 4816 patients were included (22.09% women). Women were older, presented with longer patient delay (90 vs. 75 minutes, p=0.0066), higher risk profile (GRACE>140: 75.1% vs. 56.05%, p<0.0001), and received less reperfusion therapy (68.8% vs. 74.7%, p<0.0001) with longer total reperfusion time (307 vs. 240 minutes, p<0.0001). Women received less thrombolysis (24.53% vs. 29.98%, p<0.0001) and longer door-to-needle time (85 vs. 70 minutes, p 0.0023). We found no differences regarding primary percutaneous coronary intervention or door-to-balloon time. Women also had higher hospital mortality (crude odds ratio 2.54, 95% confidence interval 1.99-3.26, p<0.0001), which persisted after controlling the effect of patient delay, age, risk (GRACE), and reperfusion (adjusted odds ratio 1.43, 95% confidence interval 1.0-2.06, p=0.0492). Using TIMI or Killip risk scores as risk estimates yielded nonsignificant results. Conclusions: Compared with men, women with STEMI have worse access to reperfusion and higher hospital mortality. The impact of the differences in accessibility on mortality gap remains uncertain. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
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