在等待一项新的心脏研究期间,患者的性别和情感支持作为死亡和临床恶化的预测因素:来自1年随访的结果

Gerdi Weidner, Daniela Zahn, Nancy R Mendell, Jacqueline M A Smits, Mario C Deng, Armin Zittermann, Heike Spaderna
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引用次数: 12

摘要

背景:关于患者性别和情感支持在心脏移植候选者预后中的作用知之甚少。目的:探讨患者性别和情感支持作为等待新心脏研究结果的预测因素。设计、环境和参与者:等待新的心脏研究是一项前瞻性观察研究,对318名新加入心脏移植等待名单的患者(18%为女性)进行了研究。人口统计学、医学、社会心理特征(包括社会支持[enrichment社会支持指数;高支持与低支持])在等候名单时进行评估。主要结局:考虑到等待上市后前12个月的竞争结局(如移植),直到死亡/因健康恶化而退市的时间,通过病因特异性Cox比例风险模型进行分析。结果:12个月时,男性32例(12%),女性10例(17%)死亡/恶化。不同性别的医疗风险具有可比性。男性比女性更多的人报告情感支持低(20.4%比8.6%),过去或现在吸烟(80.4%比56.9%)。职业水平低的女性多于男性(93.1%比69.6%;P值均< 0.05)。在控制了医疗风险和其他混杂变量后,女性显著增加了死亡/恶化的风险(风险比2.30;95%置信区间为1.04-5.12;P = .04);低情绪支持进一步倾向于增加这种结果的风险(P = .07)。由于5名低情感支持的女性都没有达到这个终点,因此对男性样本进行了分析,结果显示,低情感支持的男性死亡/病情恶化的可能性是高支持男性的两倍多(风险比,2.23;95%置信区间为1.04-4.82;P = .04)。结论:与混杂变量无关,女性在等待心脏移植时的存活率比男性低。尽管情感支持对男性来说可能是一个重要的缓冲,但对女性的保护因素需要更大的样本和/或更长时间的随访来进一步调查。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Patients' sex and emotional support as predictors of death and clinical deterioration in the waiting for a new heart study: results from the 1-year follow-up.

Context: Little is known about the role of patient's sex and emotional support in the prognosis of heart transplant candidates.

Objective: To examine patient's sex and emotional support as predictors of outcomes in the Waiting for a New Heart Study.

Design, setting, and participants: The Waiting for a New Heart Study is a prospective observational study of 318 patients (18% female) newly added to the waiting list for a heart transplant. Demographic, medical, psychosocial characteristics (including social support [ENRICHD Social Support Index; high vs. low support]) were assessed at the time of wait-listing. Main Outcomes-Time until death/delisting due to deteriorated tealth, considering competing outcomes (e.g., transplantation) during the first 12 months after wait-listing were analyzed via cause-specific Cox proportional hazard models.

Results: By 12 months, 32 men (12%) and 10 women (17%) had died/deteriorated. Medical risk was comparable across sexes. More men than women reported low emotional support (20.4% vs. 8.6%) and being a past or current smoker (80.4% vs. 56.9%). More women than men had low vocational level (93.1% vs. 69.6%; all P values < .05). With medical risk and other confounding variables controlled for, female sex significantly increased risk of death/deterioration (hazard ratio, 2.30; 95% confidence interval, 1.04-5.12; P = .04); low emotional support further tended to increase the risk for this outcome (P = .07). As none of the 5 women with low emotional support had reached this end point, analyses were performed in the male sample and revealed that men with low emotional support were more than twice as likely to die/deteriorate than were men with high support (hazard ratio, 2.23; 95% confidence interval, 1.04-4.82; P = .04).

Conclusion: Women had worse survival while awaiting a heart transplant than men had, independent of confounding variables. Even though emotional support may be an important buffer for men, protective factors for women warrant further investigation with larger samples and/or longer follow-ups.

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