Background: Major differences between women and men exist in the clinical presentation, medical care, and prognosis and outcomes of stroke. We assessed the sex-specific association of major risk factors and… Click to show full abstract
Background: Major differences between women and men exist in the clinical presentation, medical care, and prognosis and outcomes of stroke. We assessed the sex-specific association of major risk factors and the risk of incident stroke, including its major subtypes, among women and men. Methods: Between 2006-10, the UK Biobank recruited over 500,000 participants aged 40-69 years across the UK. During 9 years of follow-up, 4,662 (44% women) cases of stroke were recorded among 471,971 (56% women) individuals without a history of cardiovascular disease at baseline. Cox regression models yielded adjusted hazard ratios (HRs), and women-to-men ratios of HRs (RHR), for stroke associated with seven risk factors. Results: The incidence rate per 10,000 person years was 8.66 (8.29; 9.04) in women and 13.96 (13.44; 14.50) in men for any stroke; 6.06 (5.75; 6.38) in women and 11.35 (10.88; 11.84) in men for ischaemic stroke, and 1.56 (1.41; 1.73) in women and 2.23 (2.02; 2.45) in men for haemorrhagic stroke. The magnitude of the relationship between increases in indices of blood pressure, body anthropometry, and lipid levels, diabetes mellitus, and atrial fibrillation and the risk of any stroke was similar between men and women. Hypertension (stage 2), current smoking, and a low socioeconomic status, respectively, were associated with a greater HR of any stroke in women than men; the RHRs were 1.36 (1.26; 1.47), 1.18 (1.02; 1.36), and 1.17 (1.03; 1.33). Diabetes was associated with a higher HR of ischaemic stroke in women than men (RHR: 1.25 [1.00; 1.56]). Atrial fibrillation was associated with a higher HR of haemorrhagic stroke in women than men (RHR: 2.80 [1.07; 7.36]). The incidence of stroke was higher among men than women for all risk factors, except type 1 diabetes and atrial fibrillation (haemorrhagic stroke only). Conclusion: Several risk factors are more strongly associated with the risk of any stroke or stroke subtypes in women compared with men. Despite this, the incidence of stroke in the presence of risk factors generally remains higher among men than women.
               
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