Under-representation of Women as Proceduralists and Patients in TAVR and TMVr Procedures: Data, Implications and Proposed Solutions

Author:

Burgess Sonya1,Cader F. Aaysha2,Shaw Elizabeth1,Banerjee Shrilla3,Stehli Julia4,Krishnamorthy Roopa5,Khor Lynn5,Forotan Homa6,Bastiany Alexandra7,Rao Sarita8,Chandrasekhar Jaya9,Zaman Sarah10,Alasnag Mirvat11,Chieffo Alaide12,Coylewright Megan13

Affiliation:

1. Department of Medicine, University of Sydney, Sydney, New South Wales, Australia

2. Department of Cardiology, Ibrahim Cardiac Hospital & Research Institute, Dhaka, Bangladesh

3. Department of Cardiology, Surrey and Sussex Healthcare NHS Trust, Redhill, UK

4. Department of Cardiology, University Hospital Zurich, Zurich, Switzerland

5. Department of Cardiology, Nepean Hospital, Sydney, New South Wales, Australia

6. Department of Cardiology, Princess Alexandra Hospital, Brisbane, Queensland, Australia

7. Thunder Bay Regional Health Sciences Centre and Northern Ontario School of Medicine, Thunder Bay, Ontario, Canada

8. Department of Cardiology, Apollo Hospital, Indore, India

9. Department of Cardiology, Eastern Health, Melbourne, Victoria, Australia

10. Westmead Applied Research Centre, University of Sydney, Sydney, New South Wales, Australia

11. Department of Cardiology, King Fahd Armed Forces Hospital, Jeddah, Saudi Arabia

12. Interventional Cardiology Unit, San Raffaele Scientific Institute, Milan, Italy

13. Section of Cardiovascular Medicine, Erlanger Heart and Lung Institute, Chattanooga, Tennessee, US

Abstract

Women are under-represented among transcatheter aortic valve replacement (TAVR) and transcatheter mitral valve repair (TMVr) operators. This review assesses the representation of women as patients and as proceduralists and trial authors in major structural interventions. Women are under-represented as proceduralists in structural interventions: only 2% of TAVR operators and 1% of TMVr operators are women. Only 1.5% of authors in landmark clinical TAVR and TMVr trials are interventional cardiologists who are women (4/260). Significant under-representation and under-enrolment of women in landmark TAVR trials is evident: the calculated participation-to-prevalence ratio (PPR) is 0.73, and in TMVr trials, the PPR is 0.69. Under-representation of women is also evident in registry data (PPR = 0.84 for TAVR registries and for TMVr registries). In structural interventional cardiology, women are under-represented as proceduralists, trial participants and patients. This under-representation has the potential to affect the recruitment of women to randomised trials, subsequent guideline recommendations, selection for treatment, patient outcomes and sex-specific data analysis.

Publisher

Radcliffe Media Media Ltd

Subject

Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine

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