Gao Fei, Lam Carolyn Su Ping, Sim Ling Ling, Koh Tian Hai, Foo David, Ong Hean Yee, Tong Khim Leng, Tan Huay Cheem, Machin David, Wong Kok Seng, Chan Mark Yan Yee, Chua Terrance Siang Jin
National Heart Centre Singapore, 5 Hospital Drive, Singapore, 169609, Singapore.
Centre for Quantitative Medicine, Duke-NUS Graduate Medical School, 8 College Road, Singapore, 169857, Singapore.
BMC Public Health. 2015 Mar 31;15:308. doi: 10.1186/s12889-015-1612-x.
The role of sex, and its joint effect with age and diabetes mellitus, on mortality subsequent to surviving an acute myocardial infarction (AMI) beyond 30 days are unclear. The high prevalence of diabetes mellitus in an ethnically diverse Asian population motivates this study.
The study population comprised of a nationwide cohort of Asian patients with AMI, hospitalized between 2000 to 2005, who survived the first 30 days post-admission and were followed prospectively until death or 12 years.
Among the 13,389 survivors, there were fewer women (25.5%) who were older than men (median 70 vs. 58 years) and a larger proportion had diabetes mellitus at admission (51.4% vs. 31.4%). During follow-up 4,707 deaths (women 13.2%; men 22.0%) occurred, with women experiencing higher mortality than men with an averaged hazard ratio (HR): 2.08; 95% confidence interval : 1.96-2.20. However the actual adverse outcome, although always greater, reduced over time with an estimated HR: 2.23 (2.04-2.45) at 30 days to HR: 1.75; (1.47-2.09) 12 years later. The difference in mortality also declined with increasing age: HR 1.80 (1.52-2.13) for those aged 22-59, 1.26 (1.11-1.42) for 60-69, 1.06 (0.96-1.17) and 0.96 (0.85-1.09) for those 70-79 and 80-101 years. Significant two-factor interactions were observed between sex, age and diabetes (P < 0.001). Diabetic women <60 years of age had greater mortality than diabetic men of the same age (adjusted HR: 1.44; 1.14-1.84; P = 0.003), while diabetic women and men ≥60 years of age had a less pronounced mortality difference (adjusted HR: 1.12; 0.99-1.26).
One in two women hospitalized for AMI in this Asian cohort had diabetes and the sex disparity in post-MI mortality was most pronounced among these who were <60 years of age. This underscores the need for better secondary prevention in this high-risk group.
性别及其与年龄和糖尿病的联合作用对急性心肌梗死(AMI)存活30天以上患者的死亡率影响尚不清楚。在种族多样的亚洲人群中,糖尿病的高患病率促使了本研究的开展。
研究人群包括2000年至2005年间在全国范围内住院的亚洲AMI患者队列,这些患者在入院后的前30天存活,并进行前瞻性随访直至死亡或12年。
在13389名幸存者中,女性(25.5%)少于男性(中位数70岁对58岁),入院时患糖尿病的比例更高(51.4%对31.4%)。随访期间发生了4707例死亡(女性13.2%;男性22.0%),女性的死亡率高于男性,平均风险比(HR)为2.08;95%置信区间:1.96 - 2.20。然而,实际不良结局虽始终更大,但随时间推移而降低,估计HR从30天时的2.23(2.04 - 2.45)降至12年后的1.75(1.47 - 2.09)。死亡率差异也随年龄增长而下降:22 - 59岁者的HR为1.80(1.52 - 2.13),60 - 69岁者为1.26(1.11 - 1.42),70 - 79岁者为1.06(0.96 - 1.17),80 - 101岁者为0.96(0.85 - 1.09)。在性别、年龄和糖尿病之间观察到显著的双因素相互作用(P < 0.001)。年龄<60岁的糖尿病女性死亡率高于同龄糖尿病男性(调整后HR:1.44;1.14 - 1.84;P = 0.003),而年龄≥60岁的糖尿病女性和男性死亡率差异不那么明显(调整后HR:1.12;0.99 - 1.26)。
在这个亚洲队列中,因AMI住院的女性中有二分之一患有糖尿病,心肌梗死后死亡率的性别差异在年龄<60岁的人群中最为明显。这突出了对这一高危群体进行更好的二级预防的必要性。