Roumia Mazen, Aronow Herbert D, Soukas Peter, Gosch Kensey, Smolderen Kim G, Spertus John A, Abbott J Dawn
1 Cardiovascular Institute, Warren Alpert Medical School of Brown University, Providence, RI, USA.
2 Saint Luke's Mid America Heart Institute, Kansas City, MO, USA.
Vasc Med. 2017 Apr;22(2):103-109. doi: 10.1177/1358863X16686408. Epub 2017 Mar 14.
Peripheral artery disease (PAD) is associated with poor health status (symptoms, functioning, quality of life (QOL)). Whether sex differences exist in PAD-specific health status is unknown. In patients presenting to a specialty clinic with new-onset or recent exacerbation of PAD, we examined sex differences as assessed by the Peripheral Artery Questionnaire (PAQ). The Patient-centered Outcomes Related to TReatment Practices in Peripheral Arterial Disease: Investigating Trajectories (PORTRAIT) study is a multicenter, international prospective study of patients with new or worsening PAD symptoms. Baseline characteristics and mean PAQ scores were compared among women ( n=481) and men ( n=793) before they underwent treatment. The independent association of sex with health status was assessed with multivariable linear regression. As compared with men, women were less often Caucasian, married and employed, and more often lacking health insurance, living alone (36.2% vs 23.6%, p<0.001), had depression and avoided care due to cost (17.0% vs 12.3%, p=0.018). Women and men were of a similar age and education level, and had similar ankle-brachial index (ABI) values (0.7 ± 0.2 in both groups, p=0.052). Female sex was independently associated with lower PAQ scores on all domains (physical functioning adjusted mean difference of -8.40, p<0.001; social functioning adjusted mean difference of -6.8, p<0.001; QOL adjusted mean difference of -6.7, p<0.001), although no differences were observed in treatment satisfaction (adjusted mean difference -0.20, p=0.904). Despite similar ABIs, women presenting with symptoms of PAD had poorer PAD-specific functioning as compared with men, impacting all major health status domains, independent of socio-economic and clinical characteristics.
外周动脉疾病(PAD)与健康状况不佳(症状、功能、生活质量(QOL))相关。PAD特异性健康状况是否存在性别差异尚不清楚。在因PAD新发或近期加重而到专科门诊就诊的患者中,我们通过外周动脉问卷(PAQ)评估了性别差异。外周动脉疾病治疗实践相关的以患者为中心的结局:调查轨迹(PORTRAIT)研究是一项针对新发或PAD症状恶化患者的多中心、国际前瞻性研究。在接受治疗前,比较了女性(n = 481)和男性(n = 793)的基线特征和平均PAQ得分。通过多变量线性回归评估性别与健康状况的独立关联。与男性相比,女性中白种人、已婚和就业的比例较低,而缺乏医疗保险、独居的比例较高(36.2%对23.6%,p<0.001),患有抑郁症且因费用问题而避免就医的比例较高(17.0%对12.3%,p = 0.018)。女性和男性的年龄和教育水平相似,踝臂指数(ABI)值也相似(两组均为0.7±0.2,p = 0.052)。女性性别与所有领域的较低PAQ得分独立相关(身体功能调整后的平均差异为-8.40,p<0.001;社会功能调整后的平均差异为-6.8,p<0.001;生活质量调整后的平均差异为-6.7,p<0.001),尽管在治疗满意度方面未观察到差异(调整后的平均差异为-0.20,p = 0.904)。尽管ABI相似,但与男性相比,出现PAD症状的女性具有更差的PAD特异性功能,这影响了所有主要健康状况领域,且独立于社会经济和临床特征。