Sex differences in aortic stenosis: Identification of knowledge gaps for sex-specific personalized medicine

This review summarizes sex-based differences in aortic stenosis (AS) and identifies knowledge gaps that should be addressed by future studies. AS is the most common valvular heart disease in developed countries. Sex-specific differences have not been fully appreciated, as a result of widespread unde...

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Veröffentlicht in:American heart journal plus 2022-09, Vol.21, p.100197, Article 100197
Hauptverfasser: Iribarren, Ana C., AlBadri, Ahmed, Wei, Janet, Nelson, Michael D., Li, Debiao, Makkar, Raj, Merz, C. Noel Bairey
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:This review summarizes sex-based differences in aortic stenosis (AS) and identifies knowledge gaps that should be addressed by future studies. AS is the most common valvular heart disease in developed countries. Sex-specific differences have not been fully appreciated, as a result of widespread under diagnosis of AS in women. Studies including sex-stratified analyses have shown differences in pathophysiology with less calcification and more fibrosis in women's aortic valve. Women have impaired myocardial perfusion reserve and different compensatory response of the left ventricle (LV) to pressure overload, with concentric remodeling and more diffuse fibrosis, in contrast to men with more focal fibrosis and more dilated/eccentrically remodeled LV. There is sex difference in clinical presentation and anatomical characteristics, with women having more paradoxical low-flow/low-gradient AS, under-diagnosis and severity underestimated, with less referral to aortic valve replacement (AVR) compared to men. The response to therapies is also different: women have more adverse events with surgical AVR and greater survival benefit with transcatheter AVR. After AVR, women would have more favorable LV remodeling, but sex-related differences in changes in myocardial reserve flow need future research. Investigation into these described sex-related differences in AS offers potential utility for improving prevention and treatment of AS in women and men. To better understand sex-based differences in pathophysiology, clinical presentation, and response to therapies, sex-specific critical knowledge gaps should be addressed in future research for sex-specific personalized medicine. •Aortic stenosis (AS) has increasing incidence in women, but sex-specific differences have not been fully appreciated.•Identifying sex differences in aortic valve disease would potentially improve prevention and treatment of AS, both in women and men.•Future studies are needed to address sex-specific knowledge gaps and provide sex-specific personalized medicine.
ISSN:2666-6022
2666-6022
DOI:10.1016/j.ahjo.2022.100197