Aims: Atrial fibrillation (AF) has been highlighted as a growing epidemic. Evidence is lacking on the role of different risk factors within both genders especially in AF patients referred for catheter ablation (CA). The objective was the evaluation of differences between men and women in the associations with aging, obesity and hypertension as the most highly contributing factors to AF onset and progression.
Methods: Cases selected among patients scheduled for CA as a rhythm-control strategy and controls from a recent Italian national survey on the population's health conditions were analysed to quantify the strength of association and to assess the existence of gender differences. To reduce the effect of possible confounding factors, both cases and controls were selected without preexisting comorbidities other than hypertension.
Results: At multivariate logistic regression analysis, cases (534 patients, 166 women) were significantly associated with the male sex, higher age, presence of obesity and hypertension in comparison to controls (17,983 subjects, 9,409 women). At analyses gender-stratified, age and obesity had a significant greater association in women than men. On the contrary, hypertension was relatively more frequent in men than women.
Conclusion: Although mechanisms linking risk factors and AF are complex, this study suggests the existence of differences mediated by gender in AF drug-refractory patients who underwent CA. A tailored public health programme to reduce the growing burden of AF needs to be designed to prevent and counter the increasing epidemic of the most common cardiac arrhythmia as well as its progression in more resistant forms.
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