Are there sex differences in 30-day safety and healthcare utilization outcomes among ED patients presenting with acute chest pain?
In a large U.S. ED cohort, women presenting with chest pain had significantly lower rates of 30-day death or MI, hospitalizations, and objective cardiac testing compared to men.
Large studies examining sex-based differences in emergency department (ED) cardiovascular care are lacking. This analysis compared cardiovascular healthcare utilization and safety outcomes between women and men in a large U.S. cohort managed under a standardized high-sensitivity troponin (hs-cTn) pathway. We conducted an observational study of ED patients ≥18 years old presenting with chest pain from 1/2021–12/2021 across 25 EDs. Sex was defined by the legal sex EHR variable. The primary safety outcome was 30-day all-cause death or myocardial infarction (MI). The primary healthcare utilization outcome was hospitalizations at 30 days. Secondary healthcare utilization outcomes included 30-day objective cardiac testing (OCT: stress testing, coronary computed tomography angiography, invasive coronary angiography). Outcomes were compared between sexes using chi-squared tests and logistic regression, where models adjusted for cardiovascular disease confounders and initial hs-cTn. Among 40,979 patients, 56.6% (23,188/40,979) were female with mean age 52. Death or MI at 30 days occurred in 2.4% (552/23,188) of women and 5.2% (917/17,791) of men ( p < 0.001). After adjustment, women had lower odds of death or MI (aOR 0.65, 95%CI 0.57–0.74). Hospitalizations occurred in 30.2% (6998/23,188) of women compared to 36.0% (6411/17,791) of men ( p < 0.001). OCT occurred in 14.9% (3452/23,188) of women and 19.6% (3488/17,791) of men (p < 0.001). With adjustment, women were hospitalized less (aOR 0.93, 95%CI 0.88–0.98) and underwent less OCT (aOR 0.93, 95%CI 0.87–0.98) at 30-days. In a large ED cohort of patients with chest pain, rates of death or MI, hospitalizations, and OCT at 30-days were lower in women compared to men.
McKnight et al. (Wed,) studied this question.
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