Women are more likely to survive a stroke, but have a worse disability and poorer quality of life afterward compared to men, according to research published in the latest issue of Neurology®, the medical journal of the American Academy of Neurology. The George Institute for Global Health researchers looked at sex differences in treatment and outcomes in 19,652 individuals who had been part of five international randomized controlled trials to identify how to improve the lives of both men and women after a stroke.
Lead author Dr. Cheryl Carcel said that variations in how women were treated in hospital and whether they had been receiving appropriate treatment for their risk factors beforehand may partly explain the differences found in the study.
“While the trials we looked at did not specifically investigate treatments, we found a hint that while women who had a stroke were more likely to be admitted to an acute stroke unit, they were less likely to be intubated, treated for fever or admitted to an intensive care unit compared to men. Admission to an acute stroke unit may play a role in the increased survival seen in women,” Carcel stated. “There was also a hint that women were more likely to be taking blood pressure-lowering medication, but less likely to have been prescribed blood-thinning, glucose-lowering or lipid-lowering medication prior to their stroke than men. This is similar to other studies in cardiovascular disease but we are planning to look at this more closely in further research.”
As many as 65% of stroke survivors suffer a disability, leading to a need for assistance with daily living activities. Most strokes are ischemic strokes, occurring due to sudden blockage of a blood vessel in the brain.
“While we know women tend to be older when they have a stroke and are more likely to have key risk factors such as high blood pressure and irregular heart rhythms than men, whether they are treated differently and how that affects their longer-term outlook was less certain,” noted Carcel. “It is clear that women and men require different types of support after stroke but physicians may also need to pay more attention to risk factor control in women.”
Carcel added that sex difference in stroke needs to be considered in the context of disease risk, management, and outcomes requiring an increased focus on research and health services delivery.