From the Menzies Institute for Medical Research Tasmania, University of Tasmania, Hobart, Australia (H.T.P., C.L.B., P.O., S.G.).
Department of Health Management and Health Economics, Pham Ngoc Thach University of Medicine, HoChiMinh City, Vietnam (H.T.P.).
Stroke. 2019 Sep;50(9):2299-2306. doi: 10.1161/STROKEAHA.118.024437. Epub 2019 Aug 15.
Background and Purpose- Women are reported to have poorer health-related quality of life (HRQoL) after stroke than men, but the underlying reasons are uncertain. We investigated factors contributing to the sex differences. Methods- Individual participant data on 4288 first-ever strokes (1996-2013) were obtained from 4 high-quality population-based incidence studies from Australasia and Europe. HRQoL utility scores among survivors after stroke (range from negative scores=worse than death to 1=perfect health) were calculated from 3 scales including European Quality of Life-5 Dimensions, Short-Form 6-Dimension, and Assessment of Quality of Life at 1 year (3 studies; n=1210) and 5 years (3 studies; n=1057). Quantile regression was used to estimate the median differences in HRQoL for women compared to men with adjustment for covariates. Study factors included sociodemographics, prestroke dependency, stroke-related factors (eg, stroke severity), comorbidities, and poststroke depression. Study-specific median differences were combined into pooled estimates using random-effect meta-analysis. Results- Women had lower pooled HRQoL than men (median difference 1 year, -0.147; 95% CI, -0.258 to -0.036; 5 years, -0.090; 95% CI, -0.119 to -0.062). After adjustment for age, stroke severity, prestroke dependency, and depression, these pooled median differences were attenuated, more greatly at 1 year (-0.067; 95% CI, -0.111 to -0.022) than at 5 years (-0.085; 95% CI, -0.135 to -0.034). Conclusions- Women consistently exhibited poorer HRQoL after stroke than men. This was partly attributable to women's advanced age, more severe strokes, prestroke dependency, and poststroke depression, suggesting targets to reduce the differences. There was some evidence of residual differences in HRQoL between sexes but they were small and unlikely to be clinically significant.
背景与目的- 据报道,女性在中风后健康相关生活质量(HRQoL)较男性差,但潜在原因尚不确定。我们调查了导致性别差异的因素。
方法- 从澳大拉西亚和欧洲的 4 项高质量人群为基础的发病研究中获取了 4288 例首次中风(1996-2013 年)的个体参与者数据。使用欧洲生活质量 5 维度量表、短式 6 维度量表和 1 年(3 项研究;n=1210)和 5 年(3 项研究;n=1057)评估结果的生活质量评估量表计算中风后幸存者的 HRQoL 效用评分。使用分位数回归估计女性与男性相比的 HRQoL 中位数差异,并对协变量进行调整。研究因素包括社会人口统计学、中风前依赖、中风相关因素(如中风严重程度)、合并症和中风后抑郁。使用随机效应荟萃分析将研究特异性中位数差异合并为汇总估计值。
结果- 女性的 HRQoL 总体低于男性(1 年时的中位数差异,-0.147;95%CI,-0.258 至-0.036;5 年时,-0.090;95%CI,-0.119 至-0.062)。调整年龄、中风严重程度、中风前依赖和抑郁后,这些汇总中位数差异减弱,1 年时(-0.067;95%CI,-0.111 至-0.022)比 5 年时(-0.085;95%CI,-0.135 至-0.034)更为明显。
结论- 女性中风后 HRQoL 持续差于男性。这在一定程度上归因于女性年龄较大、中风更严重、中风前依赖和中风后抑郁,提示需要减少这些差异。在性别间 HRQoL 方面存在一些证据表明仍存在差异,但这些差异较小,不太可能具有临床意义。