123I-mIBG scintigraphy parameters significantly predicted cardiac arrhythmic events in men with heart failure, but no significant predictive variables were found in women.
Cohort
Does 123I-mIBG scintigraphy predict cardiac arrhythmic events differently in men versus women with heart failure?
123I-mIBG scintigraphy is a more effective tool for predicting cardiac arrhythmic events in male patients with heart failure than in women.
BACKGROUND: I-mIBG-scintigraphy could be a useful stratifying tool for patients with heart failure (HF). The purpose of this retrospective study is to evaluate whether there are differences between men and women with HF in terms of the prediction of cardiac arrhythmic events (AE). RESEARCH AND METHODS: I-mIBG-scintigraphy and an evaluation of the results was performed after 85 months of follow-up. Early and late planar and SPECT cardiac images were acquired. Heart-to-mediastinum ratio (HM) for planar images and the sum of the segmental scores (SS) for SPECT were calculated. RESULTS: In the general population, age, early SS (ESS), late SS (LSS), and ejection fraction (EF) were statistically significant for the prediction of AE at Cox regression, while early and late HM (eHM,lHM) were not significative for the prediction of AE. Population was divided into females and males and univariate analysis was conducted separately for the two cohorts: no significant variables for prediction of AE were found in females. For males, ESS, LSS, EF, and late HM were statistically significant predictors of AE. The overall survival was similar in males and females, but the risk of AE is lower in males than in females. CONCLUSIONS: I-mIBG represents a more effective tool for the prediction of AE in male patients than in women.
Conte et al. (Wed,) conducted a cohort in Heart failure. 123I-mIBG scintigraphy vs. Sex differences (males vs females) was evaluated on Prediction of cardiac arrhythmic events (AE). 123I-mIBG scintigraphy parameters significantly predicted cardiac arrhythmic events in men with heart failure, but no significant predictive variables were found in women.