
The findings of a recent study indicate that women with atrial fibrillation (AFib) have worse quality of life compared to men with AFib. The results appeared in the American Journal of Preventative Cardiology.
“Women have worse patient-reported outcomes in (AFib) than men, but the reasons remain poorly understood. We investigated how comorbid conditions, treatment, social factors, and their modification by sex would attenuate sex-specific differences in patient-reported outcomes in AF,” the researchers wrote.
This study comprised 339 individuals (45% women) with prevalent AF we measured patient-reported outcomes with the Short-Form-12 (SF-12, an 8-domain quality of life measure), and the AF Effect on QualiTy of Life (AFEQT), an instrument specific to AF, both with range 0-100 and higher scores indicating superior outcomes. The researchers assessed sex-specific differences in patient-reported outcomes using multivariable-adjusted regression analyses while factoring for demographics, comorbid conditions, treatment, social factors, and their sex-based modification.