Women with suspected coronary artery disease had similar symptoms and more heart disease risk factors, compared with men, but were assessed as lower risk by their providers and on all standard risk scores, according to a secondary analysis of the PROMISE trial.
The results “highlight the need for sex-specific approaches to coronary artery disease evaluation and testing,” said Kshipra Hemal at Duke Clinical Research Institute in Durham, N.C., and her associates. The findings will be presented April 3 at the annual meeting of the American College of Cardiology and were published online March 23 in the Journal of the American College of Cardiology: Cardiovascular Imaging.
The PROMISE (Prospective Multicenter Imaging Study for the Evaluation of Chest Pain) trial is one of the largest contemporary trials of symptomatic, nonacute suspected CAD. The study included 10,003 stable outpatients, nearly half of whom were women. The researchers calculated the 2008 Framingham score, 2013 Atherosclerotic Cardiovascular Disease score, 1979 Diamond and Forrester score, modified 2011 Diamond and Forrester score, and 2012 combined Diamond-Forrester and Coronary Artery Surgery Study scores for all patients. Patients also were randomly assigned to either anatomical testing with CT angiography or to functional testing with exercise electrocardiogram, stress nuclear imaging, or stress echocardiogram (J Am Coll Cardiol Img. 2016 Mar 23. doi: 10.1016/j.jcmg.2016.02.001).
Women in the study were an average of 3 years older than the men and were significantly more likely to be hypertensive (67% vs. 63%), dyslipidemic (69% vs. 66%), and to have a family history of premature CAD (35% vs. 29%; P less than .01 for all comparisons), the researchers reported. Nonetheless, all five risk scores characterized women as lower risk than men (P less than .001 for mean differences). Moreover, before testing, providers characterized 41% of women having a low (less than 30%) likelihood of CAD, compared with 34% of men (P less than .001).
Women were more likely than men to be referred for stress echocardiography or nuclear stress test, but only 9.7% had a positive noninvasive test, compared with 15% of men (P less than .001), the researchers also reported. “A number of characteristics predicted positive test results, and many characteristics were similar between the sexes,” they added. “However, in multivariable models, key predictors of test positivity were few and varied by sex.” Body mass index and Framingham risk score predicted a positive test for women, while both the Framingham and modified Diamond-Forrester risk scores predicted a positive test for men.
Chest pain was the most common primary symptom reported by nearly three-quarters of women and men and was described as “crushing/pressure/squeezing/tightness” 53% and 46% of the time, respectively (P less than .001). Dyspnea was the second most frequent primary symptom at 15% for both sexes. Women were more likely than men to describe back pain, neck or jaw pain, or palpitations, but only 0.6% to 2.7% of patients ranked these among their main symptoms.
“Further studies are warranted to examine the underlying pathophysiology and implications for clinical care of the sex-based clinical differences observed along the entire diagnostic pathway of suspected CAD, including risk factor burden, presenting symptoms, and testing results,” the researchers concluded.
The PROMISE study was funded by the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute. Ms. Hemal had no disclosures. Senior author Dr. Pamela S. Douglas disclosed grant support from HeartFlow and having served on a data and safety monitoring board for General Electric Healthcare. Two of the other 15 coinvestigators also disclosed relationships with industry; the rest had no disclosures.