作者
Kajetan Grodecki,Zenon Huczek,Piotr Ścisło,Michał Kowara,Sergio Raposeiras‐Roubín,Fabrizio D’Ascenzo,Emad Abu‐Assi,José P.S. Henriques,Mark B. Effron,José Ramón González‐Juanatey,Stephen B. Wilton,Wouter J. Kikkert,Iván J. Núñez‐Gil,Albert Ariza‐Solé,Xiantao Song,Dimitrios Alexopoulos,Christoph Liebetrau,Tetsuma Kawaji,Claudio Moretti,Shaoping Nie,Toshiharu Fujii,Luís Cláudio Lemos Correia,Masa‐aki Kawashiri,José Marı́a Garcı́a-Acuña,Danielle Southern,Emilio Alfonso,Belén Terol,Alberto Garay,Dongfeng Zhang,Yalei Chen,Ioanna Xanthopoulou,Neriman Osman,Helge Möllmann,Hiroki Shiomi,Francesca Giordana,Silvia Scarano,Fiorenzo Gaïta,Xiao Wang,Yan Yan,Jingyao Fan,Yuji Ikari,Takuya Nakahashi,Kenji Sakata,Masakazu Yamagishi,Oliver Kalpak,Saško Kedev,Grzegorz Opolski,Krzysztof J. Filipiak
摘要
Bleeding is an independent risk factor of mortality in patients with acute coronary syndromes (ACS). BleeMACS project focuses on long-term bleeding events after hospital discharge, thus we evaluated gender-related differences in post-discharge bleeding among patients with ACS.We investigated 13,727 ACS patients treated with percutaneous coronary intervention and discharged on dual antiplatelet therapy (either with clopidogrel or prasugrel/ticagrelor). Endpoint was defined as intracranial bleeding or any other bleeding leading to hospitalization and/or red blood transfusion.Post-discharge bleeding was reported more frequently in females as compared with males (3.7% vs. 2.7%, log-rank P = 0.001). Females (n = 3165, 23%) were older compared to men (69.0 vs. 61.5 years, P < 0.001) and with more comorbidities. Hence, in multivariate analysis female sex was not identified as an independent risk factor of bleeding (HR 1.012, CI 0.805 to 1.274, P = 0.816). Administration of newer antiplatelet agents compared to clopidogrel was associated with over twofold greater bleeding rate in females (7.3% vs. 3.5%, log-rank P = 0.004), but not in males (2.6% vs. 2.7%, log-rank P = 0.887). Differences among females remained significant after propensity score matching (7.2% vs 2.4%, log-rank P = 0.020) and multivariate analysis confirmed that newer antiplatelet agents are independent risk factor for bleeding only in women (HR 2.775, CI 1.613 to 4.774, P < 0.001).Bleeding events occurred more frequently in women, but female sex itself was not independent risk factor. Administration of newer antiplatelet agents was identified as independent risk factor of bleeding after hospital discharge in female gender, but not in male patients.