Title of article :
Clinical trial (GUSTO-1 and INJECT) evidence of earlier death for men than women after acute myocardial infarction
Author/Authors :
Rieves، نويسنده , , Dwaine and Wright، نويسنده , , George and Gupta، نويسنده , , Ghanshyam and Shacter، نويسنده , , Emily، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2000
Pages :
7
From page :
147
To page :
153
Abstract :
Epidemiologic studies of acute myocardial infarction (AMI) have described gender differences in the time of death after infarction, with greater numbers of men dying before hospitalization than women. However, in controlled, hospital-based clinical trials, women die at higher rates than men. We hypothesized that evidence of a gender difference in the time of death following AMI may be found in controlled studies of hospitalized AMI patients. We performed a retrospective analysis of the Global Utilization of Streptokinase and Tissue Plasminogen Activator for Occluded Coronary Arteries (GUSTO-1) and International Joint Efficacy Comparison of Thrombolytics (INJECT) trial databases using logistic regression modeling and time-to-death analyses. The age-adjusted female-to-male odds ratio for mortality was 1.4 (95% confidence interval 1.3 to 1.5) in GUSTO-1 and 1.5 (95% confidence interval 1.3 to 1.8) in INJECT. GUSTO-1 showed that among patients dying during the first 24 hours after symptom onset, men died an average of 1.7 hours earlier than women (p <0.001). This difference was due to earlier deaths among men ≤65 years of age. Furthermore, in GUSTO-1, the analysis of time to death in hour increments demonstrated that greater proportions of men died at earlier time points than women and a disproportionate number of early deaths occurred among younger men than among women of any age or older men. In INJECT, where time to death could only be analyzed in 1-day increments, no gender differences were evident. These results raise the possibility that the pattern of earlier death for men in thrombolytic clinical trials represents the continuation of a gender-specific mortality pattern that began before hospitalization. The death of a disproportionate number of men before hospitalization may represent an inherent gender bias for clinical studies enrolling only hospitalized patients. More high-risk men would be excluded from these studies than women because of death before hospitalization. Hence, gender comparisons of in-hospital mortality rates may artificially inflate values for women.
Journal title :
American Journal of Cardiology
Serial Year :
2000
Journal title :
American Journal of Cardiology
Record number :
1891720
Link To Document :
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