Volume 82, Issue 1 pp. 19-26
Coronary Artery Disease

Incidence and clinical impact of concurrent chronic total occlusion according to gender in ST-Elevation myocardial infarction

Yoann Bataille MD

Yoann Bataille MD

Department of Cardiology Quebec Heart-Lung Institute, 2725, chemin Ste Foy, Quebec City, Canada

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Jean-Pierre Déry MD

Jean-Pierre Déry MD

Department of Cardiology Quebec Heart-Lung Institute, 2725, chemin Ste Foy, Quebec City, Canada

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Éric Larose MD

Éric Larose MD

Department of Cardiology Quebec Heart-Lung Institute, 2725, chemin Ste Foy, Quebec City, Canada

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Eltigani Abdelaal MD

Eltigani Abdelaal MD

Department of Cardiology Quebec Heart-Lung Institute, 2725, chemin Ste Foy, Quebec City, Canada

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Jimmy Machaalany MD

Jimmy Machaalany MD

Department of Cardiology Quebec Heart-Lung Institute, 2725, chemin Ste Foy, Quebec City, Canada

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Josep Rodés-Cabau MD

Josep Rodés-Cabau MD

Department of Cardiology Quebec Heart-Lung Institute, 2725, chemin Ste Foy, Quebec City, Canada

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Stéphane Rinfret MD

Stéphane Rinfret MD

Department of Cardiology Quebec Heart-Lung Institute, 2725, chemin Ste Foy, Quebec City, Canada

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Ugo Déry PhD

Ugo Déry PhD

Department of Cardiology Quebec Heart-Lung Institute, 2725, chemin Ste Foy, Quebec City, Canada

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Olivier Costerousse PhD

Olivier Costerousse PhD

Department of Cardiology Quebec Heart-Lung Institute, 2725, chemin Ste Foy, Quebec City, Canada

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Louis Roy MD

Louis Roy MD

Department of Cardiology Quebec Heart-Lung Institute, 2725, chemin Ste Foy, Quebec City, Canada

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Olivier F. Bertrand MD, PhD

Corresponding Author

Olivier F. Bertrand MD, PhD

Department of Cardiology Quebec Heart-Lung Institute, 2725, chemin Ste Foy, Quebec City, Canada

Correspondence to: Olivier F. Bertrand, Interventional Cardiology, Quebec Heart-Lung Institute, 2725, Chemin Ste Foy, Quebec (QC), Canada. E-mail: [email protected]Search for more papers by this author
First published: 16 October 2012
Citations: 14

Conflict of interest: Nothing to report.

Abstract

Objectives

To determine the prevalence of a concurrent CTO in men and women and to examine its impact on mortality.

Background

The impact of chronic total occlusion (CTO) in patients with ST-elevation myocardial infarction (STEMI) according to gender has not been assessed.

Methods

Patients referred with STEMI were categorized into single vessel disease (SVD), multivessel disease (MVD) without, with 1 or > 1 CTO. The primary end-point was the 1-year mortality.

Results

Among the 2020 STEMI patients included between 2006 and 2011, 24% were female. Women were older, had more hypertension and renal failure (P < 0.0001 for all). The prevalence of 1 or > 1 concurrent CTO was similar in both sexes, 7 and 1%, respectively. Early and late mortality was significantly higher in women compared with men (P < 0.0001). In women, the mortality was significantly worse in patients with > 1 CTO (100%) and with 1 CTO (36.4%) compared with those with MVD without CTO (18.4%) or with SVD (10.4%) (P < 0.0001). MVD with and without concurrent CTO were both independent predictors of 1-year mortality in women (HR 3.58; 95 % CI 1.69–7.18 and HR 2.76; 95 % CI 1.33–5.51) whereas only MVD with CTO was predictive in men (HR 2.19; 95% CI 1.20–3.97).

Conclusions

Among unselected STEMI patients, the prevalence of CTO was equal in both sexes whereas early and late mortality remained significantly higher in women. Other factors than the presence of a concurrent CTO must be explored to explain differences in survival after STEMI between women and men. © 2013 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.

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