Aortic stenosis calcium scoring in a racially mixed sample

Submitted: June 3, 2020
Accepted: July 28, 2020
Published: October 2, 2020
Abstract Views: 893
PDF: 523
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Aortic stenosis (AS) is common and increasing in prevalence as the population ages. Using computed tomography (CT) to quantify aortic valve calcification (AVC) it has been reported that men have greater degrees of calcification than women among subjects with severe AS. These data, however, were derived in largely Caucasian populations and have not been verified in non-Caucasian subjects. This retrospective study identified 137 patients with severe AS who underwent valve replacement and had CT scans within 6 months prior to surgery. AVC scores were compared between men and women, both in the entire sample and in racial subgroups. 52% of subjects were male and 62.8% were non-Caucasian. Mean AVC score for the entire cohort was 3062.08±2097.87 with a range of 428-13,089. Gender differences in aortic valve calcification were found to be statistically significant with an average AVC score of 3646±2422 in men and 2433±1453 in women (p=0.001). On multivariate analysis, gender remained significantly associated with AVC score both in the entire sample (p=0.014) and in the non-Caucasian subgroup (p=0.008). Mean AVA was significantly greater in males than females but this difference disappeared when AVA was indexed to BSA (p=0.719). AVA was not different between racial groups (p=0.369). In this research we observed that among subjects with severe AS men have higher AVC scores than women regardless of racial background. This is consistent with previous studies in predominantly Caucasian populations.

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Brito, Daniel, Igor Goykhman, Kevin Bryan Lo, Yaser Alhamshari, Jorge Luis Peñalver, Francisco Aguilar, Eduardo Quintero, Aditi Kalla, Evan Friend, and Gregg S. Pressman. 2020. “Aortic Stenosis Calcium Scoring in a Racially Mixed Sample”. Monaldi Archives for Chest Disease 90 (4). https://doi.org/10.4081/monaldi.2020.1429.

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