September 9, 2013 — Cardiac stents to open blocked heart arteries and reduce chest pain have been used for decades. However, cardiologists have never been certain that women benefitted from their use because clinical trials testing stents only included, at most, 25 percent women, making the overall findings mostly relevant to just men.
But now a new worldwide pooled analysis, presented by researchers from The Mount Sinai Medical Center at the ESC Congress 2013 in Amsterdam, organized by the European Society of Cardiology, provides strong evidence that stents work well in women. Their examination of 26 randomized stent studies that enrolled 11,557 women concluded that women benefit just as much from stents as men do.
All of the different generations of stents were also deemed to be effective. However, researchers also found that the use of the newest drug-eluting stents (DES) in women were safer in comparison to earlier era DES and bare-metal stents.
“We are happy that our analysis showed promising results for women and found stents are beneficial in females. The magnitude of benefit seems to be in line with what the clinical trials show in the general population they studied, which was mostly men,” reports the study’s lead investigator, Roxana Mehran, M.D., director of interventional cardiovascular research and clinical trials and professor of medicine in cardiology at Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai.
“Whenever you have only 25 percent of a population, such as women, represented in clinical trials, you are really never sure of the safety and efficacy of a medical device in that population,” said Mehran. “Clinically, women are not always the same as men.”
It is not clear why more women were not enrolled in the clinical trials testing different generations of stents. “It may be that many women did not meet the clinical trial inclusion criteria because they are generally older when a stent is needed and because of age, they may have additional health issues that made them ineligible. Also, they may just have chosen not to participate,” according to Mehran.
While the reason for the lack of female participation in stent clinical trials was not the focus of this new study, the critical issue could make a difference in how women have been ultimately treated for their heart disease over the years, according to study co-author Usman Baber, M.D., director of clinical biometrics and assistant professor of medicine in cardiology at Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai.
“There could very well be some reluctance by cardiologists in giving certain devices to women because of the lack of available safety and effectiveness data in the female population,” Baber said.
“The results of our new analysis should provide reassurance to both physicians and female patients that the stent devices we are using have a similar efficacy and safety profile to what we have observed in men,” said Baber.
In the 10-year analysis of stent use, 10 percent of women received a bare-metal stent, 36 percent were given an earlier generation DES, and 54 percent received more advanced DES stents.
The investigators found that the three-year rates of death or heart attack among women treated with bare-metal stents, early generation DES and newer generation DES, was 13 percent, 11 percent and 9 percent, respectively. Rates of stent thrombosis — the development of a new clot — were 1 percent, 2 percent and 1 percent, respectively. And the use of DES was also associated with a significant reduction in the need to reopen the artery — the range was 19 percent, 8 percent and 6 percent, respectively.
Interestingly, this new gender analysis on stent use was generated by an extraordinary global collaboration. The Society for Cardiovascular Angiography & Interventions (SCAI) launched and sponsored the Women in Innovation (WIN) Initiative, a worldwide effort devoted to improving treatment of women with cardiovascular disease.
Researchers from many countries came together at a one-day Gender Data Forum, sponsored by SCAI, WIN and the American College of Cardiology (ACC), where Mehran and her research team discussed the lack of outcomes evidence regarding the use of stents in women.
“At the end of the day, researchers and industry sponsors agreed to share data on their clinical trials to pool together and examine the available scientific evidence about stent use in women,” Mehran said. “This kind of global collaboration is unprecedented, and could serve as a future model to look at disease treatments for other populations who are underrepresented in clinical trials.”
For more information: www.mountsinai.org