Title
Spontaneous coronary artery dissection: Sex differences in clinical presentation and outcomes from the Australian New Zealand Registry.
Link to article in PubMed
Author(s)
Temple, Fergal
Dang, Quan
Burgess, Sonya
Mukherjee, Swati
Chandrasekhar, Jaya
Psaltis, Peter
Kritharides, Leonard
Jepson, Nigel
Zaheen, Mithila
Pender, Patrick
Fairley, Sarah
Ihdayhid, Abdul
Layland, Jamie
Szirt, Richard
El-Jack, Seif
Puri, Aniket
Davis, Esther
Shiekh, Imran
Arnold, Ruth
Watts, Monique
Lo, Hui Zhen
Marathe, Jessica
Bhagwandeen, Rohan
Bhindi, Ravinay
Ford, Thomas
Lo, Sidney
Marschner, Simone
Zaman, Sarah
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Spontaneous coronary artery dissection (SCAD) predominantly affects women with limited data in men. We aimed to determine sex differences in SCAD presentation, associated conditions, and major adverse cardiovascular events (MACE).
METHODS: Cohort study of 23 ANZ-SCAD sites (Australian/New Zealand Registry, data previously published) with core laboratory confirmed SCAD. Descriptive statistics for sex differences. Interaction analysis with Cox proportional hazards model assessed the effect of sex on previously published independent predictors of MACE.
RESULTS: Of a total of 527 patients with SCAD, 468 (88.8%) were female. Mean age was similar, at 53.5±10.6 in women and 52.2±10.7 in men. Women had higher rates of hypertension (30.6% versus 16.9% men, =0.044). Emotional stress as a SCAD precipitant was documented in the medical records in more women (16.0% versus 2.9% men, =0.042) with no difference when self-reported (60.6% women versus 54.2% men, =0.715). Women were more likely to have moderate/severe coronary tortuosity (55.0% versus 34.6% men, =0.009). Fibromuscular dysplasia (FMD) was detected in 24.2% versus 16.7% (=0.612) and non-FMD vascular abnormalities in 4.0% versus 16.7% (=0.027) of women versus men screened. There was no sex difference in 3-year MACE; 8.2% women, 11.9% men (log-rank =0.2). There was no interaction by sex (all values >0.05) with variables associated with increased MACE, namely oral anticoagulation, dual antiplatelet therapy comprising aspirin and ticagrelor, FMD, and previous stroke.
CONCLUSIONS: Women with SCAD had higher rates of hypertension, coronary tortuosity, and FMD, whereas men had more non-FMD vascular abnormalities. Self-reported emotional stress was common, equally prevalent in women and men. Anticoagulation, dual antiplatelet therapy, FMD, and previous stroke were independent predictors of MACE in both women and men.
REGISTRATION: URL: https://anzctr.org.au/; Unique Identifier: 12621000824864.
METHODS: Cohort study of 23 ANZ-SCAD sites (Australian/New Zealand Registry, data previously published) with core laboratory confirmed SCAD. Descriptive statistics for sex differences. Interaction analysis with Cox proportional hazards model assessed the effect of sex on previously published independent predictors of MACE.
RESULTS: Of a total of 527 patients with SCAD, 468 (88.8%) were female. Mean age was similar, at 53.5±10.6 in women and 52.2±10.7 in men. Women had higher rates of hypertension (30.6% versus 16.9% men, =0.044). Emotional stress as a SCAD precipitant was documented in the medical records in more women (16.0% versus 2.9% men, =0.042) with no difference when self-reported (60.6% women versus 54.2% men, =0.715). Women were more likely to have moderate/severe coronary tortuosity (55.0% versus 34.6% men, =0.009). Fibromuscular dysplasia (FMD) was detected in 24.2% versus 16.7% (=0.612) and non-FMD vascular abnormalities in 4.0% versus 16.7% (=0.027) of women versus men screened. There was no sex difference in 3-year MACE; 8.2% women, 11.9% men (log-rank =0.2). There was no interaction by sex (all values >0.05) with variables associated with increased MACE, namely oral anticoagulation, dual antiplatelet therapy comprising aspirin and ticagrelor, FMD, and previous stroke.
CONCLUSIONS: Women with SCAD had higher rates of hypertension, coronary tortuosity, and FMD, whereas men had more non-FMD vascular abnormalities. Self-reported emotional stress was common, equally prevalent in women and men. Anticoagulation, dual antiplatelet therapy, FMD, and previous stroke were independent predictors of MACE in both women and men.
REGISTRATION: URL: https://anzctr.org.au/; Unique Identifier: 12621000824864.
Publication information
J Am Heart Assoc. 2026 Mar 3;15(5):e042260. doi: 10.1161/JAHA.125.042260. Epub 2026 Feb 26.
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Spontaneous Coronary Artery Dissection.pdf
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Re-used under a Creative Commons Attribution License: https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/
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Date Issued
2026-03-03
Type
Journal Article
Journal Title
Journal of the American Heart Association
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