• Journal of women's health · Jun 2010

    Proceedings from the scientific symposium: Sex differences in cardiovascular disease and implications for therapies.

    • Bairey MerzC NoelCNWomen's Heart Center, Cedars-Sinai Heart Institute, 444 S. San Vincente Boulevard, Los Angeles, CA 90048, USA. merz@cshs.org, Saralyn Mark, Barbara D Boyan, Alice K Jacobs, Prediman K Shah, Leslee J Shaw, Doris Taylor, and Eduardo Marbán.
    • Women's Heart Center, Cedars-Sinai Heart Institute, 444 S. San Vincente Boulevard, Los Angeles, CA 90048, USA. merz@cshs.org
    • J Womens Health (Larchmt). 2010 Jun 1; 19 (6): 105910721059-72.

    UnlabelledA consortium of investigator-thought leaders was convened at the Heart Institute at Cedars-Sinai Medical Center and produced the following summary points: POINT 1: Important sex differences exist in cardiovascular disease (CVD) that affect disease initiation, diagnosis, and treatment.ImplicationResearch that acknowledges these differences is needed to optimize outcomes in women and men. POINT 2: Atherosclerosis is qualitatively and quantitatively different in women and men; women demonstrate more plaque erosion and more diffuse plaque with less focal artery lumen intrusion.ImplicationEvaluation of CVD strategies that include devices should be used to explore differing anatomical shapes and surfaces as well as differing drug coating and eluting strategies. POINT 3: Bone marrow progenitor cells (PCs) engraft differently based on the sex of the donor cell and the sex of the recipient.ImplicationPC therapeutic studies need to consider the sex of cells of the source and the recipient. POINT 4: Women have a greater risk of venous but not arterial thrombosis compared with men, as well as more bleeding complications related to anticoagulant treatment. Several genes coding for proteins involved in hemostasis are regulated by sex hormones.ImplicationsResearch should be aimed at evaluation of sex-based differences in response to anticoagulation based on genotype. POINT 5: Women and men can have differences in pharmacological response.ImplicationSex-specific pharmacogenomic studies should be included in pharmacological development. POINT 6: CVD progression results from an imbalance of cell injury and repair in part due to insufficient PC repair, which is affected by sex differences, where females have higher circulating levels of PCs with greater rates of tissue repair.ImplicationCVD regenerative strategies should be directed at learning to deliver cells that shift the recipient balance from injury toward repair. CVD repair strategies should ideally be tested first in females to have the best chance of success for proof-of-concept.

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