Gender differences and management of stroke risk of nonvalvular atrial fibrillation in an upper middle-income country: Insights from the CARMEN-AF registry

Jesús Antonio González-Hermosillo(Instituto Nacional de Cardiología), Manuel Alfonso Baños‐González(Universidad Juárez Autónoma de Tabasco), Milton E Guevara-Valdivia(Mexican Social Security Institute), Jorge A. Vázquez-Acosta(Instituto Tecnológico de Ciudad Madero), Manuel Odin de Los Rios Ibarra, Kulio A. Aguilar-Linares(Mexican Social Security Institute), Carlos Cantú‐Brito(Instituto Nacional de Ciencias Médicas y Nutrición Salvador Zubirán), José L. Leiva-Pons(Hospital Central Dr. Ignacio Morones Prieto), Gerardo Pozas-Garza(Hospital Zambrano Hellion), Eddie A. Favela-Pérez(Universidad Marista de Mérida), Manlio F. Márquez(Instituto Nacional de Cardiología), María Sangeado Santos(Hospital Regional de Alta Especialidad del Bajío), César González Aguilar(Hospital Regional de Alta Especialidad del Bajío), Jorge Gómez Flores(Instituto Nacional de Cardiología), Karim Yarek Juárez Escobar(Centro Médico Nacional La Raza), Samantha Rodríguez Bastidas(Pediatric Hospital of Sinaloa), José Raúl de los Ríos Ibarra(Pediatric Hospital of Sinaloa), Carmen Lama, José Paz Marcelo Jiménez Cruz(Centro Medico Nacional Siglo XXI), Enrique Martínez Flores(Centro Medico Nacional Siglo XXI), Norberto Matadamas Hernández, Vanesa Carmona, Candelaria Mancilla, Rocío Camacho Casillas, José Refugio Ramírez González(Hospital Regional de Alta Especialidad del Bajío), Reynaldo Magaña Magaña, Jorge Carrillo Calvillo, Ulises Rojel Martínez(Centro Medico Nacional Siglo XXI), Marco Antonio Alcocer Gamba, Héctor Francisco Fernández Saldaña, Laura Reséndiz Barrón, Susano Lara Vaca, Edgar Alfredo Rodríguez Salazar, Humberto Rodríguez Reyes, Marco Aurelio Islava Gálvez, José Salvador Lainez Zelaya, Lidia Evangelina Betancourt Hernández, Yoloxochitl García Jiménez(Centro Medico Nacional Siglo XXI), Sadoc Marín Rendon, Nicolás Reyes Reyes, Luis Gerardo Molina Fernández de Lara, Carlos G. Gonzalez(Hospital Regional de Alta Especialidad del Bajío), Fernando Flores Silva, Alberto Zenón Baños Velasco, Miguel Ernesto Beltrán Gámez, Amanda Castelán Ojeda, César Iván Vázquez Serna, Miguel A. Rivera, Alejandro Lechuga Martín del Campo, Demetrio Kosturakis García, Ramón Miguel Esturau Santaló, José Luis Novelo Del Valle, Luis Delgado Leal, Luis Ángel Trujillo Muñoz, José Fabián Hernández Díaz, Mariano Miguel Guerra, Raúl Isaac Márquez(Instituto Nacional de Cardiología), María Isabel Sánchez Ramírez, Marcos Robledo, José Manuel Muñoz, Juan Carlos Núñez Fragoso, Saúl Flores(Centro Medico Nacional Siglo XXI)
IJC Heart & Vasculature
January 17, 2019
Cited by 10Open Access
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Abstract

BACKGROUND: Atrial Fibrillation (AF) is associated with an increased risk of stroke and systemic embolism. Several studies have suggested that female AF patients could have a greater risk for stroke. There is scarce information about clinical characteristics and use of antithrombotic therapies in Latin American patients with nonvalvular AF. OBJECTIVE: To describe the gender differences in clinical characteristics, thromboembolic risk, and antithrombotic therapy of patients with nonvalvular AF recruited in Mexico, an upper middle-income country, into the prospective national CARMEN-AF Registry. METHODS: A total of 1423 consecutive patients, with at least one thromboembolic risk factor were enrolled in CARMEN-AF Registry during a three-year period (2014-2017). They were categorized according to Gender. RESULTS: Overall, 48.6% were women, mean age 70 ± 12 years. Diabetes, smoking, alcoholism, non-ischemic cardiomyopathy, coronary artery disease, and obstructive sleep apnea were higher in men. Most women were found with paroxysmal AF (40.6%), and most men with permanent AF (44.0%). No gender differences were found in the use of vitamin K antagonists (VKA) (30.5% in women vs. 28.0% in men). No gender differences were found in the use of direct oral anticoagulants (DOAC) (33.8% women vs 35.4% men). CONCLUSIONS: CARMEN-AF Registry demonstrates that in Mexico, regardless of gender, a large proportion of patients remain undertreated. No gender differences were found in the use of VKA or DOAC.


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