Clinical Features and Prognoses of Middle-Aged Women With ST-Elevation Myocardial Infarction With a Focus on Spontaneous Coronary Artery Dissection : Critical Pathways in Cardiology

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Original Study

Clinical Features and Prognoses of Middle-Aged Women With ST-Elevation Myocardial Infarction With a Focus on Spontaneous Coronary Artery Dissection

Almasi, Aliasghar MD*; Mansouri, Pejman MD, MPH*; Jameie, Mana MD, MPH, MBA*; Yadangi, Somayeh MD†; Parapary, Saeed Haghighi MD†; Mohsenizadeh, Seyed Abolfazl MD*; Jamshidi, Peiman MD‡; Jenab, Yaser MD*

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Critical Pathways in Cardiology 21(1):p 18-23, March 2022. | DOI: 10.1097/HPC.0000000000000275

Abstract

Background: 

Spontaneous coronary artery dissection (SCAD) has become an increasingly recognized cause of acute coronary syndrome, particularly in young women, over the last decade. The goal of this study was to determine the prognoses and characteristics of adult women with SCAD who presented with ST-elevation myocardial infarction (STEMI).

Methods: 

This retrospective cohort study enrolled all adult women under the age of 60 who had undergone coronary artery angiography in the setting of STEMI. The patients were divided into 3 groups based on their angiographic characteristics: STEMI-SCAD (STEMI due to SCAD), STEMI-ATH (STEMI caused by an atherosclerotic lesion), and STEMI-others (STEMI due to other etiologies including Takotsubo cardiomyopathy and myopericarditis, as well as STEMI despite a normal epicardial coronary angiography).

Results: 

Fifteen women out of 311 female patients aged below 60 years with STEMI were diagnosed with SCAD (4.8%). There were no significant differences in body mass index, hypertension, dyslipidemia, smoking status, opium addiction status, family history, previous percutaneous coronary intervention, coronary artery bypass grafting, and cerebrovascular accidents between the STEMI-SCAD and STEMI-ATH groups. Nevertheless, the STEMI-SCAD and STEMI-others groups were more likely to be younger, less likely to be diabetic, and less likely to have 3 cardiovascular risk factors or more than was the STEMI-ATH group. The left anterior descending artery was the most common culprit lesion in the STEMI-SCAD group (80%) and the other 2 groups. Out of the 311 patients, 7 patients died during the index hospitalization: 1 patient in the STEMI-SCAD group, 6 patients in the STEMI-ATH group, and 0 patients in the STEMI-others group. None of the patients in the STEMI-others group experienced any major adverse cardiac events during the follow-up. In the other 2 groups, the most experienced outcomes were myocardial infarction and in-hospital cardiac death, followed by target lesion revascularization and target vessel revascularization.

Conclusions: 

STEMI-SCAD is one of the known causes of STEMI in young women. Still, despite the complexity of revascularization in our patients with STEMI-SCAD, they had more favorable prognoses in both conservative and revascularization management modalities than our patients with STEMI-ATH.

Erratum

In the above article which published in the March 2022 issue of the journal, the author academic qualification for Somayeh Yadangi is corrected as follows:

Critical Pathways in Cardiology. 21(2):103, June 2022.

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