Gender differences in clinical features and complications of infective endocarditis: 11-year experience of a single institute in Egypt

Abstract Background No data exists about the gender differences among patients with infective endocarditis (IE) in Egypt. The objective was to study possible gender differences in clinical profiles and outcomes of patients in the IE registry of a tertiary care center over 11 years. Results The IE re...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Ahmed Adel Elamragy, Marwa Sayed Meshaal, Amani Ali El-Kholy, Hussein Hassan Rizk
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SpringerOpen 2020-01-01
Series:The Egyptian Heart Journal
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1186/s43044-020-0039-6
id doaj-ee96d68dfadd4673879d4c4872c26b2d
record_format Article
spelling doaj-ee96d68dfadd4673879d4c4872c26b2d2021-01-24T12:22:33ZengSpringerOpenThe Egyptian Heart Journal2090-911X2020-01-017211710.1186/s43044-020-0039-6Gender differences in clinical features and complications of infective endocarditis: 11-year experience of a single institute in EgyptAhmed Adel Elamragy0Marwa Sayed Meshaal1Amani Ali El-Kholy2Hussein Hassan Rizk3Department of Cardiology, Kasr Al Aini Hospital, Faculty of Medicine, Cairo UniversityDepartment of Cardiology, Kasr Al Aini Hospital, Faculty of Medicine, Cairo UniversityDepartment of Clinical Pathology and Microbiology, Kasr Al Aini Hospital, Faculty of Medicine, Cairo UniversityDepartment of Cardiology, Kasr Al Aini Hospital, Faculty of Medicine, Cairo UniversityAbstract Background No data exists about the gender differences among patients with infective endocarditis (IE) in Egypt. The objective was to study possible gender differences in clinical profiles and outcomes of patients in the IE registry of a tertiary care center over 11 years. Results The IE registry included 398 patients with a median age of 30 years (interquartile range, 15 years); 61.1% were males. Males were significantly older than females. Malignancy and recent culprit procedures were more common in females while chronic liver disease and intravenous drug abuse (IVDU) were more in males. IE on top of structurally normal hearts was significantly more in males (25.6% vs 13.6%, p = 0.005) while rheumatic valvular disease was more common in females (46.3% vs 29.9%, p = 0.001). There was no difference in the duration of illness before presentation to our institution. The overall complication rate was high but significantly higher in females. However, there were no significant differences in the major complications: mortality, fulminant sepsis, renal failure requiring dialysis, heart failure class III–IV, or major cerebrovascular emboli. Conclusion In this registry, IE occurred predominantly in males. Females were significantly younger at presentation. History of recent culprit procedures was more common in females while IVDU was more common in males who had a higher incidence of IE on structurally normal hearts. The overall complication rate was higher in women. IE management and its outcomes were similar in both genders.https://doi.org/10.1186/s43044-020-0039-6EndocarditisRegistriesGenderEgypt
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Ahmed Adel Elamragy
Marwa Sayed Meshaal
Amani Ali El-Kholy
Hussein Hassan Rizk
spellingShingle Ahmed Adel Elamragy
Marwa Sayed Meshaal
Amani Ali El-Kholy
Hussein Hassan Rizk
Gender differences in clinical features and complications of infective endocarditis: 11-year experience of a single institute in Egypt
The Egyptian Heart Journal
Endocarditis
Registries
Gender
Egypt
author_facet Ahmed Adel Elamragy
Marwa Sayed Meshaal
Amani Ali El-Kholy
Hussein Hassan Rizk
author_sort Ahmed Adel Elamragy
title Gender differences in clinical features and complications of infective endocarditis: 11-year experience of a single institute in Egypt
title_short Gender differences in clinical features and complications of infective endocarditis: 11-year experience of a single institute in Egypt
title_full Gender differences in clinical features and complications of infective endocarditis: 11-year experience of a single institute in Egypt
title_fullStr Gender differences in clinical features and complications of infective endocarditis: 11-year experience of a single institute in Egypt
title_full_unstemmed Gender differences in clinical features and complications of infective endocarditis: 11-year experience of a single institute in Egypt
title_sort gender differences in clinical features and complications of infective endocarditis: 11-year experience of a single institute in egypt
publisher SpringerOpen
series The Egyptian Heart Journal
issn 2090-911X
publishDate 2020-01-01
description Abstract Background No data exists about the gender differences among patients with infective endocarditis (IE) in Egypt. The objective was to study possible gender differences in clinical profiles and outcomes of patients in the IE registry of a tertiary care center over 11 years. Results The IE registry included 398 patients with a median age of 30 years (interquartile range, 15 years); 61.1% were males. Males were significantly older than females. Malignancy and recent culprit procedures were more common in females while chronic liver disease and intravenous drug abuse (IVDU) were more in males. IE on top of structurally normal hearts was significantly more in males (25.6% vs 13.6%, p = 0.005) while rheumatic valvular disease was more common in females (46.3% vs 29.9%, p = 0.001). There was no difference in the duration of illness before presentation to our institution. The overall complication rate was high but significantly higher in females. However, there were no significant differences in the major complications: mortality, fulminant sepsis, renal failure requiring dialysis, heart failure class III–IV, or major cerebrovascular emboli. Conclusion In this registry, IE occurred predominantly in males. Females were significantly younger at presentation. History of recent culprit procedures was more common in females while IVDU was more common in males who had a higher incidence of IE on structurally normal hearts. The overall complication rate was higher in women. IE management and its outcomes were similar in both genders.
topic Endocarditis
Registries
Gender
Egypt
url https://doi.org/10.1186/s43044-020-0039-6
work_keys_str_mv AT ahmedadelelamragy genderdifferencesinclinicalfeaturesandcomplicationsofinfectiveendocarditis11yearexperienceofasingleinstituteinegypt
AT marwasayedmeshaal genderdifferencesinclinicalfeaturesandcomplicationsofinfectiveendocarditis11yearexperienceofasingleinstituteinegypt
AT amanialielkholy genderdifferencesinclinicalfeaturesandcomplicationsofinfectiveendocarditis11yearexperienceofasingleinstituteinegypt
AT husseinhassanrizk genderdifferencesinclinicalfeaturesandcomplicationsofinfectiveendocarditis11yearexperienceofasingleinstituteinegypt
_version_ 1724325952048070656