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Sex differences in the generalizability of randomized clinical trials in heart failure with reduced ejection fraction

Authors :
Megan Schroeder
Yvonne Mei Fong Lim
Gianluigi Savarese
Kiliana Suzart‐Woischnik
Claire Baudier
Tomasz Dyszynski
Ilonca Vaartjes
Marinus J.C. Eijkemans
Alicia Uijl
Ronald Herrera
Eleni Vradi
Jasper J. Brugts
Hans‐Peter Brunner‐La Rocca
Vanessa Blanc‐Guillemaud
Sandra Waechter
Fabrice Couvelard
Benoit Tyl
Samuel Fatoba
Arno W. Hoes
Lars H. Lund
Christoph Gerlinger
Folkert W. Asselbergs
Diederick E. Grobbee
Maureen Cronin
Stefan Koudstaal
Source :
Schroeder, M, Lim, Y M F, Savarese, G, Suzart-Woischnik, K, Baudier, C, Dyszynski, T, Vaartjes, I, Eijkemans, M J C, Uijl, A, Herrera, R, Vradi, E, Brugts, J J, Brunner-la Rocca, H-P, Blanc-Guillemaud, V, Waechter, S, Couvelard, F, Tyl, B, Fatoba, S, Hoes, A W, Lund, L H, Gerlinger, C, Asselbergs, F W, Grobbee, D E, Cronin, M & Koudstaal, S 2023, ' Sex differences in the generalizability of randomized clinical trials in heart failure with reduced ejection fraction ', European Journal of Heart Failure, vol. 25, no. 6 . https://doi.org/10.1002/ejhf.2868
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

Aims: In order to understand how sex differences impact the generalizability of randomized clinical trials (RCTs) in patients with heart failure (HF) and reduced ejection fraction (HFrEF), we sought to compare clinical characteristics and clinical outcomes between RCTs and HF observational registries stratified by sex. Methods and results: Data from two HF registries and five HFrEF RCTs were used to create three subpopulations: one RCT population (n = 16 917; 21.7% females), registry patients eligible for RCT inclusion (n = 26 104; 31.8% females), and registry patients ineligible for RCT inclusion (n = 20 810; 30.2% females). Clinical endpoints included all-cause mortality, cardiovascular mortality, and first HF hospitalization at 1 year. Males and females were equally eligible for trial enrolment (56.9% of females and 55.1% of males in the registries). One-year mortality rates were 5.6%, 14.0%, and 28.6% for females and 6.9%, 10.7%, and 24.6% for males in the RCT, RCT-eligible, and RCT-ineligible groups, respectively. After adjusting for 11 HF prognostic variables, RCT females showed higher survival compared to RCT-eligible females (standardized mortality ratio [SMR] 0.72; 95% confidence interval [CI] 0.62–0.83), while RCT males showed higher adjusted mortality rates compared to RCT-eligible males (SMR 1.16; 95% CI 1.09–1.24). Similar results were also found for cardiovascular mortality (SMR 0.89; 95% CI 0.76–1.03 for females, SMR 1.43; 95% CI 1.33–1.53 for males). Conclusion: Generalizability of HFrEF RCTs differed substantially between the sexes, with females having lower trial participation and female trial participants having lower mortality rates compared to similar females in the registries, while males had higher than expected cardiovascular mortality rates in RCTs compared to similar males in registries.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Schroeder, M, Lim, Y M F, Savarese, G, Suzart-Woischnik, K, Baudier, C, Dyszynski, T, Vaartjes, I, Eijkemans, M J C, Uijl, A, Herrera, R, Vradi, E, Brugts, J J, Brunner-la Rocca, H-P, Blanc-Guillemaud, V, Waechter, S, Couvelard, F, Tyl, B, Fatoba, S, Hoes, A W, Lund, L H, Gerlinger, C, Asselbergs, F W, Grobbee, D E, Cronin, M & Koudstaal, S 2023, ' Sex differences in the generalizability of randomized clinical trials in heart failure with reduced ejection fraction ', European Journal of Heart Failure, vol. 25, no. 6 . https://doi.org/10.1002/ejhf.2868
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....e196e20202299c900507f06b0d792a13