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April 21, 2021
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In veterans with premature ASCVD, women treated less intensively vs. men

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Among veterans with premature atherosclerotic CVD, women received less aggressive secondary prevention treatments compared with men and demonstrated lower levels of statin adherence in ischemic heart disease, researchers reported.

According to data published in JAMA Cardiology, additional disparities were observed for race, in which women with ASCVD were more often Black than white or Asian.

Graphical depiction of source quote presented in the article
Salim S. Virani, MD, PhD, FAHA, professor of medicine and cardiology at Baylor College of Medicine, staff cardiologist at the Michael E. DeBakey VA Medical Center in Houston.

“It may be that clinicians who are taking care of patients who have premature CVD, may think that this was an isolated event,” Salim S. Virani, MD, PhD, FAHA, professor of medicine and cardiology at Baylor College of Medicine, staff cardiologist at the Michael E. DeBakey VA Medical Center in Houston, told Healio. “If I have a 45-year-old man or 40-year-old woman who had a heart attack, stroke or peripheral artery disease, we may think this was a one-time event and that they’re going to be fine; whereas we know that may not be the case. A lot of these patients continue to have recurrent events. Perhaps it is a bias that when we see a young patient sitting in front of us in the office, they look much better compared to an older adult who had a stroke or MI. That may lead to what we call therapeutic inertia.

“We see gaps from the patient side as well. A young patient who has a CV event also has what we call an optimism bias,” Virani told Healio. “They think, ‘I am young, nothing is going to happen to me.’ We have all gone through that phase in our life, where we think that nothing can happen to us because age is on our side. That could be another reason why we are seeing some of these issues with statin adherence.”

For this cross-sectional, nationwide analysis, researchers used VITAL registry to identify 10,413 women and 137,187 men with premature ASCVD (age 55 years) and 1,340 women and 8,145 men with extremely premature ASCVD (age 40 years). Participants had at least one primary care visit in the Veterans Affairs health care system from October 2014 to September 2015. ASCVD encompassed ischemic heart disease, ischemic cerebrovascular disease and PAD. The primary outcomes were antiplatelet use, any statin use, high-intensity statin use and statin adherence.

Women represented 7.1% of total patients with premature ASCVD and 14.1% patients with extremely premature ASCVD.

Women with premature ASCVD were more often Black (36.1% vs. 23.8%) and less often Asian (0.5% vs. 0.7%) or white (56.1% vs. 68.1%) compared with men.

Similarly, women who experienced extremely premature ASCVD were also more often Black (36.8% vs. 23.2%) and less often Asian (1.3% vs 1.5%) or white (55% vs 67.8%), compared with men.

Women received less intensive treatment

Researchers reported that among patients with premature ischemic heart disease, women were less often prescribed antiplatelet therapy (adjusted OR = 0.47; 95% CI, 0.45-0.5), any statin therapy (aOR = 0.62; 95% CI, 0.59-0.66) and high-intensity statin therapy (aOR = 0.63; 95% CI, 0.59-0.66) compared with men; however, women who did receive statin therapy were less adherent compared with men (mean proportion of days covered, 0.68 vs. 0.73; beta coefficient = 0.02; 95% CI, 0.03 to 0.01).

These findings were consistent for patients with ischemic cerebrovascular disease and PAD.

In extremely premature ASCVD, women were less often prescribed antiplatelet therapy (aOR = 0.61; 95% CI, 0.53-0.7), any statin therapy (aOR = 0.51; 95% CI, 0.44-0.58) and high-intensity statin therapy (aOR = 0.45; 95% CI, 0.37-0.54) compared with men.

“What we’re showing now is that now for women with premature ASCVD, there’s a double whammy; even among this group with premature CVD, women aren’t receiving class I therapies like antiplatelets and statins. But even for these, we see very wide disparities,” Virani told Healio.

In other findings, researchers observed no sex-related differences in statin adherence among patients with premature ischemic cerebrovascular disease, premature PAD or extremely premature ASCVD.

Saving life-years in premature ASCVD

“The important thing to remember here is that we are talking about secondary prevention,” Virani told Healio. “The number of life-years that we can lose are much greater in this group compared with a patient who may be 70 or 75 years old and experiences their first event. In terms of disability and the opportunity cost, it is higher for a young patient compared to an older patient.

“I would highlight that there are gender disparities, but even among men who have premature ASCVD, we still need to do a lot of work,” Virani told Healio. “Our results highlight the need that interventions should be directed toward both clinicians and patients to make sure that those interventions are effective when we start addressing these at a health care system level.”