American Heart Journal Plus (Jan 2022)
Underrepresentation of women in cardiac imaging trials: A review
Abstract
Inclusion and equal representation of women in cardiovascular imaging trials are essential to provide insight into the factors impacting women's heart health and outcomes. Despite heart disease being the leading cause of mortality for women in the United States, women have been underrepresented in cardiovascular clinical trials, including imaging trials. Research demonstrates that women have key sex-specific differences in the pathophysiology of cardiovascular disease, the evolution of disease state, and disease manifestation (Solimene, 2010; Nevsky et al., 2011 [1,2]). This understanding and acknowledgment come decades after clinical providers have extrapolated data from cardiovascular disease clinical trials conducted primarily on Caucasian men, assuming the data were generalizable to sex, race, and ethnicity. The current cardiology society guidelines, which recommend optimal medical therapies for various cardiovascular diseases, are based on trials predominantly focused on men rather than women.Sex-based research, governmental and institutional task forces, and policies on gender equity have made inroads into the disproportionate number of women's enrollment in clinical research. The National Institutes of Health in the 1990s set forth requirements on incorporating women and minorities in research, including clinical trials (Mastroianni et al., 1994; Mieres et al., 2014 [3,4]). Continued progress is imperative to improve the gap in the number of women enrolled in clinical research trials.