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Variations Between Women and Men in Risk Factors, Treatments, Cardiovascular Disease Incidence, and Death in 27 High-Income, Middle-Income, and Low-Income Countries (Pure): A Prospective Cohort Study Publisher Pubmed



Walliattaei M1 ; Joseph P1 ; Rosengren A2 ; Chow CK3 ; Rangarajan S1 ; Lear SA4 ; Alhabib KF5 ; Davletov K6 ; Dans A7 ; Lanas F8 ; Yeates K9 ; Poirier P10 ; Teo KK1 ; Bahonar A11 Show All Authors
Authors
  1. Walliattaei M1
  2. Joseph P1
  3. Rosengren A2
  4. Chow CK3
  5. Rangarajan S1
  6. Lear SA4
  7. Alhabib KF5
  8. Davletov K6
  9. Dans A7
  10. Lanas F8
  11. Yeates K9
  12. Poirier P10
  13. Teo KK1
  14. Bahonar A11
  15. Camilo F12
  16. Chifamba J13
  17. Diaz R14
  18. Didkowska JA15
  19. Irazola V16, 17
  20. Ismail R18
  21. Kaur M19
  22. Khatib R20
  23. Liu X21
  24. Manczuk M15
  25. Miranda JJ22
  26. Oguz A23
  27. Perezmayorga M24
  28. Szuba A25
  29. Tsolekile LP26
  30. Prasad Varma R27, 28
  31. Yusufali A29
  32. Yusuf R30
  33. Wei L31
  34. Anand SS1
  35. Yusuf S1

Source: The Lancet Published:2020


Abstract

Background: Some studies, mainly from high-income countries (HICs), report that women receive less care (investigations and treatments) for cardiovascular disease than do men and might have a higher risk of death. However, very few studies systematically report risk factors, use of primary or secondary prevention medications, incidence of cardiovascular disease, or death in populations drawn from the community. Given that most cardiovascular disease occurs in low-income and middle-income countries (LMICs), there is a need for comprehensive information comparing treatments and outcomes between women and men in HICs, middle-income countries, and low-income countries from community-based population studies. Methods: In the Prospective Urban Rural Epidemiological study (PURE), individuals aged 35–70 years from urban and rural communities in 27 countries were considered for inclusion. We recorded information on participants' sociodemographic characteristics, risk factors, medication use, cardiac investigations, and interventions. 168 490 participants who enrolled in the first two of the three phases of PURE were followed up prospectively for incident cardiovascular disease and death. Findings: From Jan 6, 2005 to May 6, 2019, 202 072 individuals were recruited to the study. The mean age of women included in the study was 50·8 (SD 9·9) years compared with 51·7 (10) years for men. Participants were followed up for a median of 9·5 (IQR 8·5–10·9) years. Women had a lower cardiovascular disease risk factor burden using two different risk scores (INTERHEART and Framingham). Primary prevention strategies, such as adoption of several healthy lifestyle behaviours and use of proven medicines, were more frequent in women than men. Incidence of cardiovascular disease (4·1 [95% CI 4·0–4·2] for women vs 6·4 [6·2–6·6] for men per 1000 person-years; adjusted hazard ratio [aHR] 0·75 [95% CI 0·72–0·79]) and all-cause death (4·5 [95% CI 4·4–4·7] for women vs 7·4 [7·2–7·7] for men per 1000 person-years; aHR 0·62 [95% CI 0·60–0·65]) were also lower in women. By contrast, secondary prevention treatments, cardiac investigations, and coronary revascularisation were less frequent in women than men with coronary artery disease in all groups of countries. Despite this, women had lower risk of recurrent cardiovascular disease events (20·0 [95% CI 18·2–21·7] versus 27·7 [95% CI 25·6–29·8] per 1000 person-years in men, adjusted hazard ratio 0·73 [95% CI 0·64-0·83]) and women had lower 30-day mortality after a new cardiovascular disease event compared with men (22% in women versus 28% in men; p<0·0001). Differences between women and men in treatments and outcomes were more marked in LMICs with little differences in HICs in those with or without previous cardiovascular disease. Interpretation: Treatments for cardiovascular disease are more common in women than men in primary prevention, but the reverse is seen in secondary prevention. However, consistently better outcomes are observed in women than in men, both in those with and without previous cardiovascular disease. Improving cardiovascular disease prevention and treatment, especially in LMICs, should be vigorously pursued in both women and men. Funding: Full funding sources are listed at the end of the paper (see Acknowledgments). © 2020 Elsevier Ltd
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