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November 25, 2003
News this month
Gender differences in RF catheter ablation therapy
Researchers have found that women with heart arrhythmias are referred
for radiofrequency (RF) catheter ablation therapy significantly
later than male patients.
Women
were referred an average
of 28 months later than men for the treatment.
With a success rate exceeding 90 percent, ablation therapy has
become the standard treatment for a variety of arrhythmias. The
procedure entails having catheters threaded through veins or arteries
to the site of the abnormal electrical pathway responsible for the
arrhythmia. The catheter emits high frequency radio waves that burn
or sever the source of abnormal heart rhythms.
The study, published in the Journal of the American College
of Cardiology, reports that women with the same or more severe
symptoms as men were referred an average of 28 months later than
men for the treatment.
Study author Nikolaos Dagres, a cardiologist practicing in Muenster,
Germany, and his colleagues looked at 894 patients, 418 men and
476 women, who had the treatment at the Hospital of the Westfaelische
Wilhelms-University during a 43-month period. In addition to being
referred later, women patients had been given more anti-arrhythmic
drugs and at the time of referral, women were more symptomatic with
a higher number of patients (80 percent of women compared to 70
percent of men) experiencing frequent tachycardia episodes, more
than once a month.
Gender did not affect the procedure’s success (93 percent
for the men and 95 percent for the women); significant complication
rates (1.1 percent for both men and women); or recurrence rates
(10 percent for men and 7.3 percent for women). No procedure-related
deaths occurred in either group.
Why the difference?
According to the authors, the reason for following a less aggressive
approach in female referral for ablation therapy “is not completely
evident,” but they postulate that concerns about radiation
exposure, especially in women of reproductive age, may play a role
(imaging used to guide the catheter relies on X-rays). In addition,
they noted that earlier studies have shown that “symptoms
of paroxysmal supraventricular tachycardia are more likely to be
attributed to panic, anxiety or stress in women than in men, thus
delaying the diagnosis of supraventricular tachycardia.”
Gender did not affect the procedure's
success; significant complication rates; or recurrence rates.
This premise is supported by the findings of the comparisons between
male and female patients based on their electrocardiogram (ECG)
results. In cases where patients had abnormal ECGs, there was no
time-to-referral difference between genders. In cases where patients
had normal ECGs, men were much more likely to be referred for ablation
therapy sooner than women. Many patients with intermittent arrhythmias
can have normal ECGs. When people have abnormal ECGs, the possibility
for physician bias is reduced, but in the absence of an abnormal
ECG, physicians may have considered symptoms to be psychosomatic
in origin.
The authors also speculated that women may delay having medical
procedures for other reasons such as concerns about safety and child
care, a predisposition to tolerate symptoms more than men or because
they consider themselves less important than men consider themselves.
Other gender differences exist in heart care
Dr. Dagres and his colleagues note that gender differences with
regard to treatment have been explored in other areas of cardiology.
It has been shown that, compared to men, women with coronary artery
disease undergo fewer diagnostic procedures and are referred for
coronary revascularization less often and later in the course of
their disease.
Also women with heart attacks have a longer prehospital delay
and undergo less noninvasive and invasive procedures than men.
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RF ablation is treatment of choice,
regardless of gender
Radiofrequency catheter ablation treatment has been available
for more than a decade, and it has proven to be a very safe, very
effective therapy for people with cardiac rhythm disturbances.
Radiofrequency catheter ablation.
. .has proven to be a very safe, very effective therapy for people
with cardiac rhythm disturbances.
Prior to its introduction, medications and open-heart surgery
were the only alternatives. Surgery represented a major step in
our understanding of arrhythmias, and it offered the potential
of a cure to patients, but physicians were justifiably conservative
in referring patientsoften very young patientsfor
major surgery with its attendant risks.
Opting for RF ablation
RF ablation presents us with a nonsurgical alternative with a
success rate near 95 percent and a 1 percent risk of significant
complications. It is the therapy of choice for many patients with
symptomatic tachycardias, including atrioventricular (AV) nodal
reentrant tachycardia, Wolff-Parkinson-White Syndrome, atrial
fibrillation, atrial flutter, atrial tachycardia and ventricular
tachycardia.
For patients with potentially fatal disorders such as Wolff-Parkinson-White
Syndrome, choosing ablation therapy is a relatively clear decision.
Other patients, such as those with AV nodal reentrant tachycardia,
who are able to control infrequent symptoms, may opt not to undergo
the procedure. Many of these patients are able to control episodes
of rapid heartbeat with Vagal maneuvers, such as coughing or bearing
down, which stimulate the vagus nerve, resulting in slowed conduction
of electrical impulses through the AV node of the heart.
The German study
In the German study, there was no difference in referral times
for those who clearly had a condition that presented a chance
of sudden death, be they men or women. The difference was in those
cases that were not as clear cut.
How do we explain the difference in those cases? As the study
authors say, there may be several forces at work.
- Women may be willing to tolerate
symptoms that men would not.
- Other women may be procrastinating because
of child care issues or other responsibilities.
- Physicians may be dismissing cases of
supraventricular tachycardia as panic attacks. The two are related
and in the absence of overt signs of SVT, it would not be unusual
to suspect panic or anxiety.
- And, in some cases, physicians may be
more likely to dismiss the symptoms of women.
I suspect there are many factors at work that result in less
aggressive care for women.
Diagnosing tachycardia
What can women do to improve their chances of getting high quality
care? Paying attention to their bodies and changes in how they
feel are important.
Symptoms of tachycardia include
palpitations, shortness of breath, dizziness and feelings of anxiety.
Symptoms of tachycardia include palpitations, shortness of breath,
dizziness and feelings of anxiety. Individuals have differing
sensitivities to what’s going on with their heart. Some people
are very clear and can describe their experience in detail. For
example, one patient may report when he’s sitting watching television,
his heart beat may suddenly race up to 150 beats per minute. Others
might describe the same situation as having occasional heart flutters.
In the absence of an abnormal electrocardiogram (ECG), it takes
some detective work to determine if a patient's symptoms are related
to an arrhythmia. The more specific an individual can be in describing
his/her experience, the less likely the symptoms will be dismissed
as anxiety.
Patients may not experience symptoms during an ECG and may have
no symptoms during a 24-hour holter monitor test. We are more
likely to use an event monitor, which patients keep for a month
or longer to record symptoms when they have them. The longer the
sampling time, the more likely an event will be recorded.
Risks and benefits
At Yale-New Haven Hospital, patients normally fast beginning at
midnight the day before undergoing an ablation. They are admitted
in the morning, receive conscious sedation and undergo the ablation,
which may take as little as two hours or as many as six. Usually
a patient remains in the hospital overnight and is discharged
the following morning.
The risks are small but they exist. There are some risks of
bleeding and infection at the catheter insertion site or of damage
to the vein or artery. There is a small risk of puncturing the
heart or nicking the lung, and there’s a small risk of blood clots
and stroke. There’s also a chanceif the normal and abnormal
electrical pathways are close togetherof damaging the normal
pathway. In this case, a pacemaker would be needed.
The most significant finding from this study is that the outcomes
for people treated with RF ablation are the same for both men
and women. It is a very effective, safe therapy and it should
be recommended for both men and women. 
Dr. Rosenfeld is an attending electrophysiologist at Yale-New
Haven Hospital and an associate professor of medicine and pediatrics
at the Yale University School of Medicine.
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