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Chest pain in Women Deborah B. Diercks, MD, MSc Professor of Emergency Medicine University of California, Davis Medical Center Disclosures: Grant and Research Support: GE Health Care Speaker’s Bureau: Astellas Pharma US, Inc. Women and Heart Disease Advisory Board: CVT Objective Case based presentation – Symptoms – Diagnosis – Risk stratification The Scope of the Problem Treating heart disease topped a list of the 10 most costly conditions for American women. – This from a new study by AHRQ. The study, based on medical care that was provided in 2008, says treating women for heart disease cost nearly $44 billion. The Scope of the Problem In 2007, CVD still caused 1 death per minute among women in the United States Women and Heart Disease: Keys to Improving Outcomes Keys to reducing mortality from CHD: Early recognition of symptoms Accurate diagnosis of CAD Treatment Case Study 39-Year-Old African-American Woman with Atypical Chest Pain Case Study 39-year-old African-American woman with recent onset of exertional jaw pain and heart burn Height: 5’4” Weight: 170 lb Waist: 45” Labs: fasting glucose: 135; TG: 200; TC: 260; HDL: 45 BP: 165/92 mm Hg Case Study Discharged from ED after 10 hours with negative cardiac enzymes and told to see a GI specialist Admitted to hospital with continued episodes of chest pain Meds: none Medical history: – Mother: CAD at age 50, diabetes at age 35 – Father: died of MI at age 55 Was there an error made at the time of the initial presentation? At what time in the evaluation was it made? Are there gender differences in presentation? Clinical Presentation of AMI in Women Compared to Men, Women Have: – Women with AMI had lower odds and a lower rate of presenting with chest pain than men • risk ratio .93; 95% confidence interval, .91-.95 – Women were significantly more likely than men to present with fatigue, neck pain, syncope, nausea, right arm pain, dizziness, and jaw pain. Heart Lung. 2011 Nov-Dec;40(6):477-91 Compared to Men, Women: – Are Older with More Comorbidities (HTN, Diabetes, CHF) – Have Higher Rates of “Silent MI – Have Smaller Cardiac Enzyme Elevations Presentation 85-90% of Women with AMI present with the complaint of chest pain Presentation-ACS Euro Heart Survey of ACS – STEMI • 85% vs 90% typical angina – NSTEMI/UA • 85% vs 87% typical angina – No difference in outcomes Hasdai Am J Cardiol 2003;91: 1466-1469 MONICA/KORA Myocardial Infarction Registry – No significant gender differences were found in chest pain, feelings of pressure or tightness, diaphoresis, pain in the right shoulder/arm/hand, and syncope. Canto Am J Cardiol 2002;90:248-253. Am J Cardiol. 2011 Jun 1;107(11):1585-9. Are EKG and cardiac markers enough? Historically Newer generation of troponins Are There Gender Differences in Noninvasive Diagnostic Tests? Some Noninvasive Testing Options Stress ECG Stress MPI/PET EBCT/CTA Stress ECHO MRI Progressive Manifestations of Myocardial Ischemia as Illustrated by the Ischemic Cascade Progressive Manifestations of Demand Ischemia Symptomatic Manifestations Chest Pain Asymptomatic Manifestations ST-T Wave Changes Systolic Dysfunction Diastolic Dysfunction Metabolic Changes Commonly Applied Noninvasive Testing Correlates of Ischemia Invasive Disease States Where Ischemia is Manifested ECG Gated SPECT, ECHO Severe Stenosis ECHO PET, CMR Moderate Stenosis Decreased Perfusion Exposure Time of Mismatch in Myocardial Oxygen Supply / Demand Near Term Prolonged ECG = electrocardiogram; SPECT = single-photon emission computed tomography; PET = positron-emission tomography; ECHO = echocardiogram; CMR = cardiovascular magnetic resonance imaging. Adapted from Mieres et al. Am Fam Physician. 2006. In press. PET, SPECT, CMR Endothelial Dysfunction/ Microvascular Disease ECG Testing in Women: Sensitivity and Specificity of ≥1 mm ST Segment Depression Comparison of AHRQ Results to Prior Studies in Women* Ex ECG Fleischmann 1998 Kwok 1999 ECHO SPECT Sn Sp Sn Sp Sn Sp - - 85% 77% 87% 64% 61% 70% 86% 79% 78% 64% 81% 73% 77% 69% Grady (AHRQ) 2003 Sn = Diagnostic sensitivity (true positive / CAD) Sp = Diagnostic specificity (true negative / no CAD) *AHRQ = Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality. Fleischmann et al. JAMA 1998;280:913-920. Kwok et al. Am J Cardiol. 1999;83:660-666. Grady et al. AHRQ Publication No. 03-E037. May 2003. Available at: http://www.ahrq.gov/downloads/pub/evidence/pdf/chdwomtop/chdwmtop.pdf. . Diagnostic Accuracy of Exercise ECG Testing in Women Altered prevalence of disease1,2 Reduced predictive accuracy in younger women2 Potential factors affecting diagnostic accuracy1: – Hormonal influences – Reduced functional capacity – Resting ST-T wave abnormalities – Comorbidities 1. Isaac D, et al. Can J Cardiol. 2001;17(suppl D):38D-48D. 2. Shaw LJ, et al. In: Charney P, ed. Coronary Artery Disease in Women: What All Physicians Need to Know. Philadelphia, Pa: American College of Physicians. 1999:327-350. Choosing a Cardiac Stress Test Stress ECHO Stress MPI Stress ECHO Ultrasound performed both at rest and during peak stress Exercise or other stress Ischemia defined by development of wall-motion abnormalities Courtesy of Howard Lewin, MD, of San Vicente Cardiac Imaging Center. Stress MPI Exercise or pharmacologic stress vs rest Stress Rest Stress Myocardial accumulation of radioactivity in proportion to blood flow Rest Stress Rest Ischemia defined by diminished perfusion during stress vs rest Stress Rest Courtesy of Jennifer H. Mieres, MD, NYU Medical Center. PROGNOSTIC CAPABILITY OF NONINVASIVE TESTS IN WOMEN: IMPORTANT FOR MANAGEMENT What Is the Warranty of a Normal Test? Exercise ECG Stress ECHO Myocardial Perfusion Imaging Risk Stratification With Stress SPECT Cardiac Survival Perfusion Imaging Correlates With Cardiac Mortality in Women as a Function of Reversible Perfusion Defects 1.0 Number of Vascular Territories With Ischemia 1.0 0.9 0.9 0 1 2 0 1 2 3 0.8 0.8 0.7 0.6 Women (n=3,402) 0 0.5 1 1.5 2 2.5 3 Years Marwick et al. Am J Med. 1999;106:172-178. 3 0.7 Men (n=4,500) 0.6 0 0.5 1 1.5 2 2.5 3 Years Economics of Noninvasive Diagnosis (END) Study Group Do Test Results Have the Same Meaning in High-Risk Patients (eg, Diabetics) as in Other Patients? 3-Year Survival by Gender, Diabetic Status, and Extent of Myocardial Ischemia No Ischemia 1-Vessel Ischemia ≥2-Vessel Ischemia Diabetic Men 86.3% 77% 79% Nondiabetic Men 93.8% 88% 85% Diabetic Women 96.5% 72.5%* 60%* Nondiabetic Women 95.5% 85% 77.5% *P < 0.05%. Giri et al. Circulation. 2002;105:32-40. Significance of Normal Stress SPECT: Diabetic vs Nondiabetic Patients Cumulative Survival 1.00 Nondiabetics Diabetics .95 .90 Re-Test @ ~1-1.5 years .85 P<.00001 .80 0.0 .5 1.0 1.5 2.0 Follow-up (Years) Giri S, et al. Circulation. 2002;105:32-40. 2.5 3.0 When Do You Refer for Cardiac Imaging vs Exercise ECG? What’s the evidence? Algorithm for Evaluation of Symptomatic Women Using Cardiac Imaging Intermediate-High Likelihood Women With Atypical or Typical Chest Pain Symptoms Risk Factor Modification +/Anti-Ischemic Rx Good Ex Tolerance + Normal 12-L ECG Exercise TM Test Low Post-ETT LK Int Risk TM Normal or Mildly Abnormal w/ Normal LV Function Adapted from Mieres et al. Circulation. 2005;111:682-696. Diabetes, Abnormal 12-L ECG, or Questionable Ex Capacity EX OR PHARMACOLOGIC STRESS IMAGING Able to Ex Exercise Stress Unable to Ex Pharmacologic Stress Moderate-Severely Abnormal or Depressed EF Cardiac Cath Case Study 39-year-old African-American woman with recent onset of exertional jaw pain and heart burn Myocardial Perfusion Scintigraphy (MPS) Normal Short Axis Image* Stress Normal Vertical-Long Axis* Stress Rest Anteroseptum Anterior Lateral Rest Inferoseptum Inferior Inferior Images courtesy of Dr. Frans J. Wackers © Yale University. Anterior Apex Infero-apical Cardiac Catheterization Summary 39 y/o African-American woman with recent onset of exertional jaw pain and heart burn Cardiac catheterization findings: – Severe coronary artery disease (70% stenosis) in left anterior descending artery and right coronary artery – Moderate disease (65% stenosis) in left circumflex artery Ventricular function: ejection fraction of 55% Management: Referral to coronary artery bypass graft surgery Are There Gender Differences in Invasive Diagnostic Tests? Can Cardiac Catheterization Identify Coronary Artery Disease in Women? Decisive Findings From the WISE Study Approximately 50% of women referred for evaluation of ischemia do not have obstructive coronary disease – Prognosis for these women is intermediate for future adverse cardiac events and persistent symptoms Practitioners should no longer ignore nonobstructive coronary angiograms in women Practitioners should not call evidence of clear ischemia in this setting, such as a positive troponin or an abnormal stress perfusion test, a false positive Lerman et al. J Am Coll Cardiol. 2006;47:59S-62S. Women and Heart Disease: Making a Difference—A Call To Action Hospital Strategies and the Power of Partnership www.herheartcommunity.com The National Coalition for Women with Heart Disease www.womenheart.org Women and Heart Disease: Making a Difference—A Call To Action for EM Physicians Negative troponin may not mean no disease No significant disease does not mean no disease Use risk stratification to determine prognosis Integrate preventive measures into observation unit strategies More research is needed – How will the newer generation troponins change the game