Women presenting with acute myocardial infarction (AMI) have a higher mortality with conventional medical and thrombolytic therapy when compared with men. The outcome after primary percutaneous transluminal mechanical revascularization has not yet been fully investigated. This study was performed to compare the characteristics and the short- and medium-term outcomes of women and men with AMI treated with primary percutaneous revascularization. A total of 182 consecutive patients (62 women and 120 men) were included. Baseline clinical characteristics were similar except that women were older than men, presented more often in cardiogenic shock, and had smaller reference vessel diameters. Stents and abciximab were used equally, but abciximab was stopped more often in women before completion of the 12-hour infusion because of higher bleeding rates. Acute procedural success rates were similar (92% and 97%) but mortality was much higher in women, both at 30-day follow-up (100% vs 0.9%; p <0.05) and during a mean follow-up of 6.9 +/- 4.1 months (15% vs 4.4%; p <0.05). Women also experienced more unfavorable cardiovascular events (recurrent unstable angina or AMI, target vessel revascularization) than men. However, after control for baseline clinical differences in a multivariate analysis, gender was not an independent predictor of survival, whereas age, cardiogenic shock, and completion of a 12-hour abciximab infusion were.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/s0002-9149(99)00839-5 | DOI Listing |
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