Robertson T, Kennard E D, Mehta S, Popma J J, Carrozza J P, King S B, Holmes D R, Cowley M J, Hornung C A, Kent K M, Roubin G S, Litvack F, Moses J W, Safian R, Desvigne-Nickens P, Detre K M
Department of Epidemiology, University of Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania 15261, USA.
Am J Cardiol. 1997 Nov 20;80(10A):26K-39K. doi: 10.1016/s0002-9149(97)00762-5.
Higher complication rates and lower success rates for treatment of women compared with men have been reported in prior studies of coronary angioplasty and in most early reports of outcome with new coronary interventional devices. In multivariate analysis this has been attributed largely to older age and other unfavorable clinical characteristics. These results are reflected in the current guidelines for coronary angioplasty. Women in prior studies have also had different distributions of vessel and lesion characteristics, but the influence of these differences on the outcome of new-device interventions have not been adequately evaluated. This article evaluates the influence of gender on clinical and angiographic characteristics, interventional procedure and complications, angiographic success, and clinical outcomes at hospital discharge and 1-year follow-up, as observed in the New Approaches to Coronary Intervention (NACI) registry. The NACI registry methodology has been reported in detail elsewhere in this supplement. This study focuses on the 90% of patients-975 women and 1,880 men-who had planned procedures with a single new device and also had angiographic core laboratory readings. Women compared with men were older, had more recent onset of coronary ischemic pain that was more severe and unstable, and had more frequent histories of other adverse clinical conditions. The distributions of several but not all angiographic characteristics before intervention were considered more favorable to angioplasty outcome in women. Differences were observed in device use and procedure staging. Angiographically determined average gain in lumen diameter after new-device intervention, with or without balloon angioplasty, was significantly less in women (1.38 mm) than in men (1.53 mm; p < 0.001); this 0.15 mm difference is consistent with the 0.16-mm smaller reference vessel lumen diameter of women. However, final percent diameter stenoses and TIMI flow and lesion compliance characteristics were similar. Among procedural complications, only treatment for hypotension, blood transfusion, and vascular repair occurred more often in women. More women than men were clinically unstable (2.1% vs 1.1%) or went directly to emergent coronary artery bypass graft surgery (CABG; 1.2% vs 0.6%) on leaving the interventional laboratory. However, in-hospital death (1.4% vs 1.1%), Q-wave myocardial infarction (MI) (0.9% vs 1.1%), and emergent CABG (1.5% vs 1.0%, for women and men, respectively) were not significantly different. Nonemergent CABG was more frequent in women (1.8% vs 0.9%; p < 0.05) and length of hospital stay after device intervention was longer (4.4 days vs 3.8 days in men; p < 0.01). In both univariate and multivariate analyses gender did not emerge as a significant variable in relation to the combined endpoint, death, Q-wave MI, or emergent CABG at hospital discharge. At 1-year follow-up more women than men reported improvement in angina (70% vs 62%) and fewer women than men had had repeat revascularization (32% vs 36%). Similar proportions were alive and free of angina, Q-wave MI and repeat revascularization (46% of women vs 45% of men). Although several procedure-related complications were more frequent in women than men after coronary interventions with new devices, no important disadvantages were observed for women in the rates of major clinical events at hospital discharge and at 1-year clinical follow-up. Additional studies are needed to evaluate the complex interplay of clinical, vessel, and lesion characteristics on success and complications of specific interventional techniques and to determine whether gender, per se, is a risk factor and whether gender specific interventional strategies may be beneficial.
在先前关于冠状动脉血管成形术的研究以及大多数关于新型冠状动脉介入装置疗效的早期报告中,均报道了女性治疗的并发症发生率高于男性,成功率低于男性。多变量分析表明,这主要归因于女性年龄较大以及其他不利的临床特征。这些结果反映在当前的冠状动脉血管成形术指南中。先前研究中的女性在血管和病变特征分布上也有所不同,但这些差异对新型装置介入治疗结果的影响尚未得到充分评估。本文评估了性别对临床和血管造影特征、介入操作及并发症、血管造影成功率以及出院时和1年随访时临床结局的影响,这些数据来自冠状动脉介入新方法(NACI)注册研究。NACI注册研究方法已在本增刊的其他地方详细报道。本研究聚焦于90%的患者——975名女性和1880名男性,他们接受了使用单一新型装置的计划内手术,并且有血管造影核心实验室读数。与男性相比,女性年龄更大,近期冠状动脉缺血性疼痛发作更频繁、更严重且更不稳定,并且有其他不良临床状况病史的频率更高。干预前部分但并非所有血管造影特征的分布被认为对女性血管成形术结局更有利。在装置使用和手术分期方面存在差异。无论是否进行球囊血管成形术,新型装置介入后血管造影测定的管腔直径平均增加在女性中(1.38毫米)显著小于男性(1.53毫米;p<0.001);这0.15毫米的差异与女性参考血管管腔直径小0.16毫米一致。然而,最终的直径狭窄百分比、TIMI血流和病变顺应性特征相似。在手术并发症中,只有女性低血压治疗、输血和血管修复的发生率更高。离开介入实验室时,临床上不稳定的女性多于男性(2.1%对1.1%)或直接进行急诊冠状动脉旁路移植术(CABG)的女性多于男性(1.2%对0.6%)。然而,住院死亡(1.4%对1.1%)、Q波心肌梗死(MI)(0.9%对1.1%)以及急诊CABG(女性和男性分别为1.5%对1.0%)并无显著差异。非急诊CABG在女性中更常见(1.8%对0.9%;p<0.05),装置介入后的住院时间更长(男性为3.8天,女性为4.4天;p<0.01)。在单变量和多变量分析中,性别均未成为与出院时死亡、Q波MI或急诊CABG联合终点相关的显著变量。在1年随访时,报告心绞痛改善的女性多于男性(70%对62%),进行再次血运重建的女性少于男性(32%对36%)。存活且无心绞痛、Q波MI和再次血运重建的比例相似(女性为46%,男性为45%)。尽管在使用新型装置进行冠状动脉介入治疗后,女性的一些与手术相关的并发症比男性更频繁,但在出院时和1年临床随访的主要临床事件发生率方面,未观察到女性有重要的劣势。需要进一步研究来评估临床、血管和病变特征对特定介入技术的成功和并发症的复杂相互作用,并确定性别本身是否为危险因素以及性别特异性介入策略是否可能有益。