Gaudino Mario, Alexander John H, Egorova Natalia, Kurlansky Paul, Lamy Andre, Bakaeen Faisal, Hameed Irbaz, Di Franco Antonino, Demetres Michelle, Robinson N Bryce, Chikwe Joanna, Lawton Jennifer S, Devereaux P J, Taggart David P, Flather Marcus, Reents Wilko, Boening Andreas, Diegeler Anno, Girardi Leonard N, Fremes Stephen E, Benedetto Umberto
Department of Cardiothoracic Surgery, Weill Cornell Medicine, New York, New York.
Department of Medicine, Duke Clinical Research Institute, Duke University Medical Center, Durham, North Carolina.
J Card Surg. 2020 Oct;35(10):2754-2758. doi: 10.1111/jocs.14903. Epub 2020 Jul 27.
The impact of sex on the outcomes after coronary artery bypass grafting (CABG) is controversial. The majority of CABG studies are retrospectively collected clinical or registry data, women comprise only a minority, and the reported findings represent the male predominated cohort. This individual patient meta-analysis is aimed at evaluating sex-related differences in outcomes after CABG using high quality data from randomized controlled trials (RCTs).
A systematic literature search will be performed to identify all CABG RCTs (minimum follow-up: 5 years). Detailed specification for the minimum deidentified patient records' data requirements will be provided to RCT primary contact to request their deidentified data for pooling. The pooled analysis will follow the prospective register of systematic reviews (PROSPERO) and the preferred reporting items for systematic reviews and meta-analyses for individual patient data systematic reviews (PRISMA-IPD) recommendations and will compare sex-related outcomes after CABG. The main hypothesis is that outcomes after CABG are worse in women than in men. We will also test whether treatment effects for off-pump and the use of multiple arterial grafts are present within each sex, and also, whether there are differential treatment effects between sexes. The primary endpoint will be a composite of all-cause mortality, myocardial infarction, stroke, and repeat revascularization at long-term follow up.
Ethics approval and participant consent for the study will be obtained locally by each study team if needed. Data will be disseminated and submitted to peer-reviewed scientific journals and meetings irrespective of study outcome.
性别对冠状动脉旁路移植术(CABG)术后结局的影响存在争议。大多数CABG研究是回顾性收集的临床或登记数据,女性仅占少数,报告的结果代表以男性为主的队列。这项个体患者荟萃分析旨在利用来自随机对照试验(RCT)的高质量数据评估CABG术后结局的性别差异。
将进行系统的文献检索,以识别所有CABG RCT(最短随访时间:5年)。将向RCT主要联系人提供最低限度去识别患者记录数据要求的详细规范,以请求其提供去识别数据进行汇总。汇总分析将遵循系统评价前瞻性注册库(PROSPERO)以及个体患者数据系统评价的系统评价和荟萃分析首选报告项目(PRISMA-IPD)的建议,并比较CABG术后的性别相关结局。主要假设是CABG术后女性的结局比男性差。我们还将测试每种性别中是否存在非体外循环治疗效果和使用多条动脉移植物的情况,以及性别之间是否存在不同的治疗效果。主要终点将是长期随访时全因死亡率、心肌梗死、中风和再次血运重建的综合指标。
如有需要,每个研究团队将在当地获得该研究的伦理批准和参与者同意。无论研究结果如何,数据都将进行传播并提交给同行评审的科学期刊和会议。