Abstract

BackgroundThere is limited data on gender differences among patients with spontaneous coronary artery dissection (SCAD) who present as ST-elevation myocardial infarction (STEMI) and develop cardiogenic shock (CS). ObjectivesTo describe outcomes of SCAD patients presenting with STEMI and CS and outline the differences between men and women. MethodsWe queried the US Nationwide Readmissions Database (NRD) from January 2016 to December 2020 to identify patients with SCAD presenting with STEMI who developed CS. We compared the characteristics, trends, and outcomes between men and women in this cohort. ResultsOut of 582,633 hospitalizations with STEMI, 0.2 % (1176 patients) had SCAD, of which 346 (29.4 %) had CS. There was no difference in median age between men and women (64 years (IQR 57–71) vs. 63 years (IQR 49–72), p = 0.181). Men had a higher prevalence of prior myocardial infarction (MI) (14.2 % vs. 6.2 %, p = 0.021). The overall mortality rate of SCAD patients with AMI-CS was 28.2 %, with no difference between men and women. Patients with SCAD who had CS and underwent CABG had a mortality of 20.3 %. ECMO was used in 6.1 % of SCAD patients presenting with STEMI and CS, with a survival rate of 49.9 %. ConclusionThere were no differences in the baseline characteristics, rates of revascularization, or in-hospital mortality between men and women who had SCAD complicated by CS (SCAD-CS). Patients with SCAD-CS patients who underwent CABG had around 80 % in-hospital survival. CABG should be considered as a method of revascularization in this patient cohort.

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