Bluesky Facebook Reddit Email

Higher rates of infection may explain why women have higher risk of death after bypass surgery

02.27.06 | JAMA Network

Apple MacBook Pro 14-inch (M4 Pro)

Apple MacBook Pro 14-inch (M4 Pro) powers local ML workloads, large datasets, and multi-display analysis for field and lab teams.

More than half a million coronary artery bypass graft (CABG) surgeries are performed in the United States every year, making it one of the most common surgical procedures in the country, according to background information in the article. Physicians know that women who undergo the procedure are more likely to die during hospitalization than men. This may be because of differences in artery size or the higher rate of other diseases and conditions among women, though these explanations remain controversial.

Mary A.M. Rogers, Ph.D., of the University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, and colleagues hypothesized that part of the disparity may be explained by gender differences in infection rates and consequences. They studied a group of 9,218 Medicare beneficiaries (5,749 men and 3,469 women) in Michigan who underwent CABG surgery between July 1997 and September 1998. Of these participants, 1,122 (12.2 percent) had an infection during their hospitalization.

The researchers found that women were significantly more likely to develop infection than men (16.1 percent vs. 9.8 percent), even when considering other factors such as age, length of stay, type of admission, race and presence of other illnesses. Urinary, digestive, respiratory and skin and subcutaneous (under the skin) tissue infections were all more common in women than men. More patients with infections died in the hospital (11.9 percent) than did those without infection (4 percent), and these higher mortality rates continued throughout the 100-day follow-up. The relationship between infection and death was stronger in men than in women--men with an infection were three times as likely to die as men without, while infected women had an increased risk of 1.8 times that of uninfected women.

"Clearly, infection is an important factor when evaluating the association between sex and mortality after CABG surgery," they conclude. "As a direct indicator of patient safety, infection at any site, regardless of time of onset, warrants additional investigation as a potential contributor to mortality."

(Arch Intern Med. 2006; 166: 437-443. Available pre-embargo to media at www.jamamedia.org .)

Editor's Note: This project was supported by the Veterans Affairs Medical Center/University of Michigan Patient Safety Enhancement Program and by a grant from The John A. Hartford Foundation, New York. A full financial disclosure is listed in the article.

Archives of Internal Medicine

Keywords

Article Information

Contact Information

Kara Gavin

How to Cite This Article

APA:
JAMA Network. (2006, February 27). Higher rates of infection may explain why women have higher risk of death after bypass surgery. Brightsurf News. https://www.brightsurf.com/news/L3YY3WQ1/higher-rates-of-infection-may-explain-why-women-have-higher-risk-of-death-after-bypass-surgery.html
MLA:
"Higher rates of infection may explain why women have higher risk of death after bypass surgery." Brightsurf News, Feb. 27 2006, https://www.brightsurf.com/news/L3YY3WQ1/higher-rates-of-infection-may-explain-why-women-have-higher-risk-of-death-after-bypass-surgery.html.