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Women Specific Characteristics and 1-Year Outcome Among Patients Hospitalized for Peripheral Artery Disease: A Monocentric Cohort Analysis in a Tertiary Center

Although women have lower age-standardized cardiovascular disease incidence, prevalence, and death-related rates than men, there are also reports indicating that women with cardiovascular disease receive less care, fewer investigations, and have poorer outcomes after a coronary event. The aims of th...

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Autores principales: Détriché, Grégoire, Guédon, Alexis, Mohamedi, Nassim, Sellami, Olfa, Cheng, Charles, Galloula, Alexandre, Goudot, Guillaume, Khider, Lina, Mortelette, Hélène, Sitruk, Jonas, Gendron, Nicolas, Sapoval, Marc, Julia, Pierre, Smadja, David M., Mirault, Tristan, Messas, Emmanuel
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Frontiers Media S.A. 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8858944/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35198617
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fcvm.2022.824466
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author Détriché, Grégoire
Guédon, Alexis
Mohamedi, Nassim
Sellami, Olfa
Cheng, Charles
Galloula, Alexandre
Goudot, Guillaume
Khider, Lina
Mortelette, Hélène
Sitruk, Jonas
Gendron, Nicolas
Sapoval, Marc
Julia, Pierre
Smadja, David M.
Mirault, Tristan
Messas, Emmanuel
author_facet Détriché, Grégoire
Guédon, Alexis
Mohamedi, Nassim
Sellami, Olfa
Cheng, Charles
Galloula, Alexandre
Goudot, Guillaume
Khider, Lina
Mortelette, Hélène
Sitruk, Jonas
Gendron, Nicolas
Sapoval, Marc
Julia, Pierre
Smadja, David M.
Mirault, Tristan
Messas, Emmanuel
author_sort Détriché, Grégoire
collection PubMed
description Although women have lower age-standardized cardiovascular disease incidence, prevalence, and death-related rates than men, there are also reports indicating that women with cardiovascular disease receive less care, fewer investigations, and have poorer outcomes after a coronary event. The aims of this study were to compare the characteristics of men and women hospitalized for peripheral artery disease (PAD), their cardiovascular and limb outcomes, and their 1-year mortality. The study is a prospective registry collecting data about all consecutive patients hospitalized for PAD within the vascular department of the tertiary center Georges-Pompidou European Hospital (Paris, France). Patients were required to have one of three inclusion criteria: previous revascularization of the lower limb or any lower limb artery occlusion due to an atherosclerotic vascular disease or hemodynamic evidence of PAD. Exclusion criteria were patients with lower extremity arterial occlusion due to another cause. All patients were followed-up for at least 12 months after the initial hospitalization. Among the 235 patients included, there were 61 women (26%), older than men with a median age of 75.6 and 68.3 years, respectively. Main cardiovascular risk factors and comorbidities were similar for men and women except more former or current smokers [145 (83.4%) vs. 33 (54.1%)] and more history of coronary heart disease [42 (24.1%) vs. 7 (11.5%)] in men. Most patients [138 (58.8%)] had critical limb ischemia and 97 (41.3%) had claudication, with no difference for sex. After discharge, 218 patients received an antithrombotic therapy (93.2%), 195 a lipid-lowering drug (83.3%), 185 an angiotensin converting enzyme inhibitor or angiotensin-receptor blocker (78.9%), similarly between sex. At 1-year, overall mortality, major adverse cardiovascular events, major adverse limb events did not differ with 23 (13.2%), 11 (6.3%) and 32 (18.4%) in men, and 8 (13.1%), 3 (4.9%), 15 (24.6%) in women, respectively, despite the difference in age. Overall mortality, cardiovascular outcomes, limb revascularization or amputation did not differ between men and women, 1-year after hospitalization for PAD although the latter were older, less smoker and had less coronary artery disease. Due to the small size of this cohort, larger studies and future research are needed to better understand sex-specific mechanisms in the pathophysiology and natural history of PAD.
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spelling pubmed-88589442022-02-22 Women Specific Characteristics and 1-Year Outcome Among Patients Hospitalized for Peripheral Artery Disease: A Monocentric Cohort Analysis in a Tertiary Center Détriché, Grégoire Guédon, Alexis Mohamedi, Nassim Sellami, Olfa Cheng, Charles Galloula, Alexandre Goudot, Guillaume Khider, Lina Mortelette, Hélène Sitruk, Jonas Gendron, Nicolas Sapoval, Marc Julia, Pierre Smadja, David M. Mirault, Tristan Messas, Emmanuel Front Cardiovasc Med Cardiovascular Medicine Although women have lower age-standardized cardiovascular disease incidence, prevalence, and death-related rates than men, there are also reports indicating that women with cardiovascular disease receive less care, fewer investigations, and have poorer outcomes after a coronary event. The aims of this study were to compare the characteristics of men and women hospitalized for peripheral artery disease (PAD), their cardiovascular and limb outcomes, and their 1-year mortality. The study is a prospective registry collecting data about all consecutive patients hospitalized for PAD within the vascular department of the tertiary center Georges-Pompidou European Hospital (Paris, France). Patients were required to have one of three inclusion criteria: previous revascularization of the lower limb or any lower limb artery occlusion due to an atherosclerotic vascular disease or hemodynamic evidence of PAD. Exclusion criteria were patients with lower extremity arterial occlusion due to another cause. All patients were followed-up for at least 12 months after the initial hospitalization. Among the 235 patients included, there were 61 women (26%), older than men with a median age of 75.6 and 68.3 years, respectively. Main cardiovascular risk factors and comorbidities were similar for men and women except more former or current smokers [145 (83.4%) vs. 33 (54.1%)] and more history of coronary heart disease [42 (24.1%) vs. 7 (11.5%)] in men. Most patients [138 (58.8%)] had critical limb ischemia and 97 (41.3%) had claudication, with no difference for sex. After discharge, 218 patients received an antithrombotic therapy (93.2%), 195 a lipid-lowering drug (83.3%), 185 an angiotensin converting enzyme inhibitor or angiotensin-receptor blocker (78.9%), similarly between sex. At 1-year, overall mortality, major adverse cardiovascular events, major adverse limb events did not differ with 23 (13.2%), 11 (6.3%) and 32 (18.4%) in men, and 8 (13.1%), 3 (4.9%), 15 (24.6%) in women, respectively, despite the difference in age. Overall mortality, cardiovascular outcomes, limb revascularization or amputation did not differ between men and women, 1-year after hospitalization for PAD although the latter were older, less smoker and had less coronary artery disease. Due to the small size of this cohort, larger studies and future research are needed to better understand sex-specific mechanisms in the pathophysiology and natural history of PAD. Frontiers Media S.A. 2022-02-07 /pmc/articles/PMC8858944/ /pubmed/35198617 http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fcvm.2022.824466 Text en Copyright © 2022 Détriché, Guédon, Mohamedi, Sellami, Cheng, Galloula, Goudot, Khider, Mortelette, Sitruk, Gendron, Sapoval, Julia, Smadja, Mirault and Messas. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY). The use, distribution or reproduction in other forums is permitted, provided the original author(s) and the copyright owner(s) are credited and that the original publication in this journal is cited, in accordance with accepted academic practice. No use, distribution or reproduction is permitted which does not comply with these terms.
spellingShingle Cardiovascular Medicine
Détriché, Grégoire
Guédon, Alexis
Mohamedi, Nassim
Sellami, Olfa
Cheng, Charles
Galloula, Alexandre
Goudot, Guillaume
Khider, Lina
Mortelette, Hélène
Sitruk, Jonas
Gendron, Nicolas
Sapoval, Marc
Julia, Pierre
Smadja, David M.
Mirault, Tristan
Messas, Emmanuel
Women Specific Characteristics and 1-Year Outcome Among Patients Hospitalized for Peripheral Artery Disease: A Monocentric Cohort Analysis in a Tertiary Center
title Women Specific Characteristics and 1-Year Outcome Among Patients Hospitalized for Peripheral Artery Disease: A Monocentric Cohort Analysis in a Tertiary Center
title_full Women Specific Characteristics and 1-Year Outcome Among Patients Hospitalized for Peripheral Artery Disease: A Monocentric Cohort Analysis in a Tertiary Center
title_fullStr Women Specific Characteristics and 1-Year Outcome Among Patients Hospitalized for Peripheral Artery Disease: A Monocentric Cohort Analysis in a Tertiary Center
title_full_unstemmed Women Specific Characteristics and 1-Year Outcome Among Patients Hospitalized for Peripheral Artery Disease: A Monocentric Cohort Analysis in a Tertiary Center
title_short Women Specific Characteristics and 1-Year Outcome Among Patients Hospitalized for Peripheral Artery Disease: A Monocentric Cohort Analysis in a Tertiary Center
title_sort women specific characteristics and 1-year outcome among patients hospitalized for peripheral artery disease: a monocentric cohort analysis in a tertiary center
topic Cardiovascular Medicine
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8858944/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35198617
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fcvm.2022.824466
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