Gender differences in survival and its predictors in patients after myocardial infarction: data analysis from the RIMIS register

Aim. Among patients who survived acute myocardial infarction (MI) with ST segment elevation (STEMI), to assess gender differences in clinical and anamnestic indicators, long-term survival, as well as factors affecting it. To compare the effect of recurrent MI on long-term survival in men and women.M...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: O. S. Afonina, S. Yu. Martsevich, A. V. Zagrebelnyy, D. P. Sichinava, O. M. Drapkina
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Столичная издательская компания 2024-12-01
Series:Рациональная фармакотерапия в кардиологии
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.rpcardio.online/jour/article/view/3096
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
_version_ 1849227478579544064
author O. S. Afonina
S. Yu. Martsevich
A. V. Zagrebelnyy
D. P. Sichinava
O. M. Drapkina
author_facet O. S. Afonina
S. Yu. Martsevich
A. V. Zagrebelnyy
D. P. Sichinava
O. M. Drapkina
author_sort O. S. Afonina
collection DOAJ
description Aim. Among patients who survived acute myocardial infarction (MI) with ST segment elevation (STEMI), to assess gender differences in clinical and anamnestic indicators, long-term survival, as well as factors affecting it. To compare the effect of recurrent MI on long-term survival in men and women.Material and methods. Data from the retro-prospective RIMIS register were used. In 2017, 214 patients with STEMI were admitted to the emergency cardiology department of the vascular center, 23 (10.8%) of them died in the hospital. After 6 years, the life status of patients discharged from the hospital was assessed (191 people, 129 men, 62 women). The response was 93.2%. The factors influencing the fatal outcome were assessed using a model of proportional Coke risks separately for men and women. The primary endpoint was the overall patient’s mortality.Results. The women who survived MI were, on average, 16.5 years older than the men who survived, and they were more likely to have concomitant diseases (diabetes mellitus, obesity). During the follow-up period, 34 men (26.4%) and 26 women (41.9%) died. Kaplan-Meyer curves demonstrated significantly worse survival in women compared to men. However, after the age adjustment was introduced, the risk of death in women was lower than in men (HR =0.981 (0.968-0.993), p=0.003). The main mortality predictors in women were hospitalization before reference MI, a history of coronary heart disease, a history of cerebral stroke, and anemia. In men, the main predictor of death was the presence of disability, the fact of recurrent MI, a history of chronic kidney disease and the presence of oncology (the latter two factors were rare, respectively, in 6.2% and 3.9% of patients).Conclusion. Women suffered MI much later than men. Therefore, higher mortality rates after MI were mainly determined by concomitant diseases. The main mortality predictor in men was recurrent MI. The age-adjusted risk of death after MI is lower in women than in men.
format Article
id doaj-art-08bb6ad629ce406593eef4d01b004d0e
institution Kabale University
issn 1819-6446
2225-3653
language English
publishDate 2024-12-01
publisher Столичная издательская компания
record_format Article
series Рациональная фармакотерапия в кардиологии
spelling doaj-art-08bb6ad629ce406593eef4d01b004d0e2025-08-23T10:00:37ZengСтоличная издательская компанияРациональная фармакотерапия в кардиологии1819-64462225-36532024-12-0120554154910.20996/1819-6446-2024-30962232Gender differences in survival and its predictors in patients after myocardial infarction: data analysis from the RIMIS registerO. S. Afonina0S. Yu. Martsevich1A. V. Zagrebelnyy2D. P. Sichinava3O. M. Drapkina4National Research Center for Therapy and Preventive MedicineNational Research Center for Therapy and Preventive MedicineNational Research Center for Therapy and Preventive MedicineCity polyclinic No. 9 of the Moscow Department of HealthNational Research Center for Therapy and Preventive MedicineAim. Among patients who survived acute myocardial infarction (MI) with ST segment elevation (STEMI), to assess gender differences in clinical and anamnestic indicators, long-term survival, as well as factors affecting it. To compare the effect of recurrent MI on long-term survival in men and women.Material and methods. Data from the retro-prospective RIMIS register were used. In 2017, 214 patients with STEMI were admitted to the emergency cardiology department of the vascular center, 23 (10.8%) of them died in the hospital. After 6 years, the life status of patients discharged from the hospital was assessed (191 people, 129 men, 62 women). The response was 93.2%. The factors influencing the fatal outcome were assessed using a model of proportional Coke risks separately for men and women. The primary endpoint was the overall patient’s mortality.Results. The women who survived MI were, on average, 16.5 years older than the men who survived, and they were more likely to have concomitant diseases (diabetes mellitus, obesity). During the follow-up period, 34 men (26.4%) and 26 women (41.9%) died. Kaplan-Meyer curves demonstrated significantly worse survival in women compared to men. However, after the age adjustment was introduced, the risk of death in women was lower than in men (HR =0.981 (0.968-0.993), p=0.003). The main mortality predictors in women were hospitalization before reference MI, a history of coronary heart disease, a history of cerebral stroke, and anemia. In men, the main predictor of death was the presence of disability, the fact of recurrent MI, a history of chronic kidney disease and the presence of oncology (the latter two factors were rare, respectively, in 6.2% and 3.9% of patients).Conclusion. Women suffered MI much later than men. Therefore, higher mortality rates after MI were mainly determined by concomitant diseases. The main mortality predictor in men was recurrent MI. The age-adjusted risk of death after MI is lower in women than in men.https://www.rpcardio.online/jour/article/view/3096myocardial infarctionrecurrent myocardial infarctionlong-term mortality predictorslong-term survivalgender differencesrisk factorsgender differencesacute coronary syndrome registrycoronary heart disease
spellingShingle O. S. Afonina
S. Yu. Martsevich
A. V. Zagrebelnyy
D. P. Sichinava
O. M. Drapkina
Gender differences in survival and its predictors in patients after myocardial infarction: data analysis from the RIMIS register
Рациональная фармакотерапия в кардиологии
myocardial infarction
recurrent myocardial infarction
long-term mortality predictors
long-term survival
gender differences
risk factors
gender differences
acute coronary syndrome registry
coronary heart disease
title Gender differences in survival and its predictors in patients after myocardial infarction: data analysis from the RIMIS register
title_full Gender differences in survival and its predictors in patients after myocardial infarction: data analysis from the RIMIS register
title_fullStr Gender differences in survival and its predictors in patients after myocardial infarction: data analysis from the RIMIS register
title_full_unstemmed Gender differences in survival and its predictors in patients after myocardial infarction: data analysis from the RIMIS register
title_short Gender differences in survival and its predictors in patients after myocardial infarction: data analysis from the RIMIS register
title_sort gender differences in survival and its predictors in patients after myocardial infarction data analysis from the rimis register
topic myocardial infarction
recurrent myocardial infarction
long-term mortality predictors
long-term survival
gender differences
risk factors
gender differences
acute coronary syndrome registry
coronary heart disease
url https://www.rpcardio.online/jour/article/view/3096
work_keys_str_mv AT osafonina genderdifferencesinsurvivalanditspredictorsinpatientsaftermyocardialinfarctiondataanalysisfromtherimisregister
AT syumartsevich genderdifferencesinsurvivalanditspredictorsinpatientsaftermyocardialinfarctiondataanalysisfromtherimisregister
AT avzagrebelnyy genderdifferencesinsurvivalanditspredictorsinpatientsaftermyocardialinfarctiondataanalysisfromtherimisregister
AT dpsichinava genderdifferencesinsurvivalanditspredictorsinpatientsaftermyocardialinfarctiondataanalysisfromtherimisregister
AT omdrapkina genderdifferencesinsurvivalanditspredictorsinpatientsaftermyocardialinfarctiondataanalysisfromtherimisregister