Abstract

Abstract Background Cardiac involvement is an important cause of hospitalization and mortality in patients with systemic sclerosis (SSc). Advanced echocardiographic measures such as global longitudinal strain (GLS) have already demonstrated to help identifying cardiac involvement and improve risk-stratification in these patients. However, possible sex differences in echocardiographic parameters including GLS have not been explored so far. Purpose To compare standard and advanced (GLS) echocardiographic parameters between male and female patients with SSc and evaluate their association with cardiovascular outcomes. Methods A total of 408 patients (345 females, 54±14 years old and 63 males 51±13 years old) were included in the study. The study endpoint was all-cause mortality combined with hospitalisations for heart failure, myocardial infarction, coronary interventions, device implantations, arrhythmias, cerebral infarction and peripheral ischemic disease. Results Males and females were comparable in terms of cardiovascular risk-factors and comorbidities but showed differences in terms of disease characteristics: greater modified rodnan skin score and higher creatine phosphokinase was observed in males as compared to females, although high NT-proBNP and deteriorated glomerular filtration rate was more prevalent in females. By standard echocardiography, male SSc patients were characterised by greater left ventricular (LV) volumes, but no difference was observed in LV ejection fraction. By advanced echocardiographic analysis, LV GLS was more preserved in female patients (−21% (IQR: −22% to −20%) as compared to males (−20% (IQR −21% to −19%), p<0.001. After median follow-up of 39 months (IQR: 22–66), the combined endpoint occurred in 84 patients, males were affected significantly more frequently as compared to females (20 (32%) vs. 64 (19%), p=0.017). Kaplan-Meier survival analysis showed that impaired LV GLS (based on median value −20%) was associated with higher cumulative rates of all-cause mortality both in males and females with SSc (females: Chi-Square = 80.307 Log Rank <0.001; males: Chi-Square = 4.493 Log Rank = 0.034) (Fig. 1). In univariate cox regression analyses, LV GLS was also significantly associated with the endpoint both in males and females (in males HR: 1.291, 95% CI: 1.033–1.612, p=0.025, in females HR: 1.386, 95% CI: 1.290–1.491, p<0.001). Conclusions Our study shows that among patients with SSc, LV GLS is more impaired in males as compared to females but in both groups is associated with higher prevalence of death and cardiovascular hospitalization. Funding Acknowledgement Type of funding source: None

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