Amsterdam University Medical Centre, Academic Medical Centre, Department of Cardiology, Heart Centre, University of Amsterdam, Amsterdam Cardiovascular Sciences, the Netherlands.
Amsterdam University Medical Centre, Academic Medical Centre, Department of Cardiology, Heart Centre, University of Amsterdam, Amsterdam Cardiovascular Sciences, the Netherlands; Netherlands Heart Institute, Utrecht, the Netherlands.
Resuscitation. 2021 Oct;167:173-179. doi: 10.1016/j.resuscitation.2021.08.034. Epub 2021 Aug 26.
Lower survival chances after out-of-hospital cardiac arrest (OHCA) in women is associated with lower odds of a shockable initial rhythm (SIR). We hypothesized that sex differences in the prevalence of SIR are due to sex differences in comorbidities. We aimed to establish to what extent sex differences in the cumulative comorbidity burden, measured using the Charlson Comorbidity Index (CCI), or in individual comorbidities, account for the lower proportion of SIR in women.
The association between CCI or its constituent comorbidities, and presence of SIR was studied using data (2010-2014) from a Dutch community-based OHCA registry, and included 2510 OHCA patients aged ≥18y with presumed cardiac cause.
The mean age was 67.8 ± 13.8y, 71% were men. Women were more often in high CCI categories than men. However, moderate or high disease burden was associated with lower odds of SIR compared to no disease burden only in men (OR 99 %CI 0.73 [0.53-1.00] and OR 0.54 [0.37-0.80] P-trend < 0.001), but not in women (1.00 [0.58-1.72] and 1.02 [0.57-1.84 P-trend 0.93). Adding CCI to a multivariable model did not alter the OR of sex with SIR. Of the individual comorbidities, only previous myocardial infarction was both differently distributed between sexes (men 22.7% vs. women 13.1%, p < 0.001) and associated with odds of SIR (higher in both sexes). Adding this variable to the model changed the association of sex with initial rhythm from 0.49 (0.38-0.64) to 0.53 (0.41-0.69).
Sex differences in comorbidities explained lower odds of SIR in women only modestly: differences in previous myocardial infarction contributed little, and cumulative comorbidity not at all.
院外心脏骤停(OHCA)后女性存活率较低与初始可电击节律(SIR)的可能性较低有关。我们假设 SIR 中存在的性别差异是由于合并症的性别差异所致。我们旨在确定使用 Charlson 合并症指数(CCI)衡量的累积合并症负担或个体合并症的性别差异在多大程度上导致女性 SIR 比例较低。
使用来自荷兰基于社区的 OHCA 登记处的数据(2010-2014 年)研究了 CCI 或其组成合并症与 SIR 存在之间的关联,该登记处包括 2510 名年龄≥18 岁且假定为心脏原因的 OHCA 患者。
平均年龄为 67.8±13.8 岁,71%为男性。女性的 CCI 分类较高的比例高于男性。然而,与无疾病负担相比,中重度疾病负担与 SIR 可能性降低相关,仅在男性中(OR 99%CI 0.73 [0.53-1.00] 和 OR 0.54 [0.37-0.80] P-趋势<0.001),但在女性中并非如此(1.00 [0.58-1.72] 和 1.02 [0.57-1.84 P-趋势 0.93)。在多变量模型中添加 CCI 并未改变性别与 SIR 的 OR。在个体合并症中,只有先前的心肌梗死在性别之间的分布不同(男性 22.7%,女性 13.1%,p<0.001),且与 SIR 的可能性相关(在两性中均较高)。将此变量添加到模型中,将性别与初始节律的关联从 0.49(0.38-0.64)改变为 0.53(0.41-0.69)。
合并症中的性别差异仅在一定程度上解释了女性 SIR 可能性较低的原因:先前心肌梗死的差异贡献很小,累积合并症则没有。