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Women With Stroke Far Less Likely to Get TPA


 

WASHINGTON — Women are half as likely as men to receive tissue plasminogen activator when they present to a hospital with acute stroke, Matthew Reeves, Ph.D., said at a conference sponsored by the American Heart Association.

The difference remained constant even when considering only those who arrived within 2 hours of symptom onset and had no contraindications, said Dr. Reeves of Michigan State University, East Lansing.

“There was definitely a robust gender difference that was difficult to explain away,” he said. The disparity in TPA therapy may be one factor that contributes to the gender differences in stroke outcome, he theorized. “Women are less likely to be discharged home and less likely to have good functional outcomes after a stroke. The medical therapy provided in the hospital may be one reason behind these differences.”

Dr. Reeves reviewed the charts of 2,566 patients who presented at 15 Michigan hospitals during a 6-month period in 2002. There were some significant differences at baseline, he said. Women were on average 3 years older than men (70 vs. 67 years), and more were older than 80 at the time of their stroke (33% vs. 20% of men). Additionally, women were significantly less likely to have a history of prior heart disease and dyslipidemia, less likely to be smokers or to have been ambulatory before the stroke, and more likely to have a history of heart failure and hypertension.

For most in-hospital treatments, there were no significant gender disparities, Dr. Reeves said. Women had slightly less cardiac monitoring, angiography, echocardiography, and cerebrovascular investigation, but those differences dissipated after adjusting for age and other confounders.

“The most striking difference we found was that among ischemic stroke patients, women were half as likely as men to get TPA,” he said (2.2% vs. 4.4%). “We even subanalyzed the group that arrived within the 2-hour treatment window and had no contraindications to the therapy, and although the treatment numbers went way up, to 18% for women and 28% for men, the difference between them remained significant.”

He also found a significant difference in lipid testing (42% vs. 51%). But it was interesting that there was no difference in the percent of patients who received lipid-lowering drugs at discharge, he said.

Nor were there many significant differences in in-hospital outcomes, he said. Women had slightly higher unadjusted mortality rates (9.3% vs. 8.5%), but the difference disappeared after adjusting for age. Women did have a marginally significant higher risk of worse function outcome at discharge–17%. There were no significant adjusted differences in deep vein thromboses, pulmonary embolism, or pneumonia.

The only significant outcome difference Dr. Reeves discovered was in urinary tract infection: There were more in women than in men (11% vs. 4%; OR 2.6).

There were no differences in use of warfarin, antithrombotics, or DVT prophylaxis, he added.

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