内容精选
Content Selection
《英国医学杂志》 研究文章
The BMJ Research
Atrial fibrillation as risk factor for cardiovascular disease and death in women compared with men: systematic review and meta-analysis of cohort studies [房颤作为心血管疾病和死亡的危险因素在女性和男性中的对比:队列研究的系统回顾和荟萃分析]
- 分享:
BMJ 2016; 352 doi: http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/bmj.h7013 (Published 19 January 2016)
Cite this as: BMJ 2016;352:h7013
Authors
Connor A Emdin, DPhil student, Christopher X Wong, research fellow, Allan J Hsiao, PhD student, Douglas G Altman, professor, Sanne AE Peters, research fellow, Mark Woodward, professor, Ayodele A Odutayo, DPhil student
Abstract
Objective: To determine whether atrial fibrillation is a stronger risk factor for cardiovascular disease and death in women compared with men.
Design: Meta-analysis of cohort studies.
Data sources: Studies published between January 1966 and March 2015, identified through a systematic search of Medline and Embase and review of references.
Eligibility for selecting studies: Cohort studies with a minimum of 50 participants with and 50 without atrial fibrillation that reported sex specific associations between atrial fibrillation and all cause mortality, cardiovascular mortality, stroke, cardiac events (cardiac death and non-fatal myocardial infarction), and heart failure.
Data extraction: Two independent reviewers extracted study characteristics and maximally adjusted sex specific relative risks. Inverse variance weighted random effects meta-analysis was used to pool sex specific relative risks and their ratio.
Results: 30 studies with 4 371 714 participants were identified. Atrial fibrillation was associated with a higher risk of all cause mortality in women (ratio of relative risks for women compared with men 1.12, 95% confidence interval 1.07 to 1.17) and a significantly stronger risk of stroke (1.99, 1.46 to 2.71), cardiovascular mortality (1.93, 1.44 to 2.60), cardiac events (1.55, 1.15 to 2.08), and heart failure (1.16, 1.07 to 1.27). Results were broadly consistent in sensitivity analyses.
Conclusion: Atrial fibrillation is a stronger risk factor for cardiovascular disease and death in women compared with men, though further research would be needed to determine any causality.