Alʹmanah Kliničeskoj Mediciny (Feb 2023)

The results of systemic thrombolytic therapy for acute ischemic stroke in women and men depending on the stroke risk factors

  • Sergey V. Kotov,
  • Svetlana N. Belkina,
  • Elena V. Isakova,
  • Alexey S. Kotov

DOI
https://doi.org/10.18786/2072-0505-2022-50-058
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 50, no. 8
pp. 481 – 489

Abstract

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Background: Systemic thrombolytic therapy (STLT) with alteplase is the method of choice in all patients with acute ischemic stroke (IS) within the first 4.5 hours after the symptom onset. There is a noticeable difference between men and women in the clinical characteristics and results of stroke treatment; however, results of studies have been contradictory. Aim: To evaluate the efficacy of STLT with alteplase in women compared to men, depending on the presence of some risk factors for stroke. Materials and methods: This open-label prospective observational non-interventional cohort study of STLT in IS included 209 patients (102 women, the main group, and 107 men, or the comparison group) aged 32 to 86 years. All patients received STLT with alteplase within 4.5 hours from the onset of IS symptoms. The primary endpoint of the study was 28-day survival, and the secondary endpoint was the achievement of mobility independence (0 to 2 points by the modified Rankin Scale (mRS)). Results: The demographic and clinical patient characteristics of both groups were comparable, but women were on average 5 years older than men (p = 0.003). The index IS was not the first one in 31.4% of women and 23.4% of men (p 0.05). There were no significant differences in the severity of stroke and the timing of STLT. Men had a high mortality rate in the acute period of IS, but the difference was non-significant. PST-STLT hemorrhagic transformation was more common in men, with the difference being non-significant (2 0.743, p = 0.389). Women were more likely to have type 2 diabetes mellitus (DM2) (37.3% and 20.6%, respectively, 2 7.111, p = 0.008). In women, there was a trend towards better symptom regression by about 1 point (p = 0.129). The women with DM2 had a 13% higher survival than men (p = 0.038). The numbers of patients achieving independence (02 points on the mRS scale) by Day 28 was not different (56 women and 52 men). No between-groups differences were found in the numbers of patients with arterial hypertension and atrial fibrillation. Only 13 women (12.75%) and 21 men (20%) had a normal body mass index, while 56.3% of women and 46.7% of men had obesity 2 or 3 grades, with the gender differences being non-significant. Conclusion: In women, who have received STLT in the acute period of IS, the death rates and the functional outcomes were non-inferior to those in men, despite their older age, hyperglycemia in the acute period and past history of DM2. The risk factors for stroke in women, compared to men, could be the potential cause of more frequent IS recurrence (every third case in women and every fourth in men was recurrent). Despite a number of negative factors (age, obesity, metabolic syndrome, hyperglycemia, DM2, atrial fibrillation), there was a trend towards better outcomes of STLT in women.

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