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Valvular Heart Diseases in Swedish Males and Females

Wändell, Per LU ; Li, Xinjun LU ; Carlsson, Axel C. ; Sundquist, Jan LU and Sundquist, Kristina LU (2026) In JACC: Advances 5(4).
Abstract

Background Sex differences in valvular heart diseases have been examined but rarely using a nationwide, comprehensive approach.ObjectivesThe aim of this study was to analyze the risk of different types of valvular heart diseases among males and females in Sweden.MethodsThis was a nationwide Swedish study of all individuals (N = 9,984,758; 4,969,472 males and 5,015,286 females). Valvular heart diseases were defined as at least 1 registered diagnosis in the National Patient Register between January 1, 1998, and December 31, 2018. Cox regression analysis was used to estimate HRs with 95% CIs of incident valvular heart diseases in males vs females. The Cox regression models were adjusted for age, comorbidities, and sociodemographic... (More)

Background Sex differences in valvular heart diseases have been examined but rarely using a nationwide, comprehensive approach.ObjectivesThe aim of this study was to analyze the risk of different types of valvular heart diseases among males and females in Sweden.MethodsThis was a nationwide Swedish study of all individuals (N = 9,984,758; 4,969,472 males and 5,015,286 females). Valvular heart diseases were defined as at least 1 registered diagnosis in the National Patient Register between January 1, 1998, and December 31, 2018. Cox regression analysis was used to estimate HRs with 95% CIs of incident valvular heart diseases in males vs females. The Cox regression models were adjusted for age, comorbidities, and sociodemographic factors.ResultsThere were 111,315 male cases and 107,527 female cases, corresponding to overall incidence rates per 100,000 person-years of 68.6 (95% CI: 67.5-69.8) among males and 51.3 (95% CI: 50.6-51.9) among females. The HRs (with 95% CI) for males compared to females were for rheumatic mitral valve disorders 0.50 (0.46-0.53), for rheumatic aortic valve disorders 1.08 (0.99-1.18), for rheumatic tricuspid valve disorders 0.61 (0.57-0.66), for nonrheumatic mitral valve disorders 1.08 (1.06-1.10), for nonrheumatic aortic valve disorders 1.25 (1.24-1.27), for nonrheumatic tricuspid valve disorders 0.72 (0.68-0.77), and for pulmonary valve disorders 0.82 (0.75-0.90).ConclusionsWe observed certain sex differences, with, in general, a higher incidence rate among males of valvular heart disease diagnoses, but a lower risk of specific valve disorders. The underlying factors for the sex differences are unclear and need further investigation.

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author
; ; ; and
organization
publishing date
type
Contribution to journal
publication status
published
subject
keywords
immigrants, neighborhood, rheumatic valvular heart disease, sex, socioeconomic status, valvular heart disease
in
JACC: Advances
volume
5
issue
4
article number
102666
publisher
American College of Cardiology
external identifiers
  • pmid:41863204
  • scopus:105034667720
ISSN
2772-963X
DOI
10.1016/j.jacadv.2026.102666
language
English
LU publication?
yes
id
69a97b74-191f-4557-8bdf-f1dabe675c3c
date added to LUP
2026-06-10 14:17:07
date last changed
2026-06-24 15:10:07
@article{69a97b74-191f-4557-8bdf-f1dabe675c3c,
  abstract     = {{<p>Background Sex differences in valvular heart diseases have been examined but rarely using a nationwide, comprehensive approach.ObjectivesThe aim of this study was to analyze the risk of different types of valvular heart diseases among males and females in Sweden.MethodsThis was a nationwide Swedish study of all individuals (N = 9,984,758; 4,969,472 males and 5,015,286 females). Valvular heart diseases were defined as at least 1 registered diagnosis in the National Patient Register between January 1, 1998, and December 31, 2018. Cox regression analysis was used to estimate HRs with 95% CIs of incident valvular heart diseases in males vs females. The Cox regression models were adjusted for age, comorbidities, and sociodemographic factors.ResultsThere were 111,315 male cases and 107,527 female cases, corresponding to overall incidence rates per 100,000 person-years of 68.6 (95% CI: 67.5-69.8) among males and 51.3 (95% CI: 50.6-51.9) among females. The HRs (with 95% CI) for males compared to females were for rheumatic mitral valve disorders 0.50 (0.46-0.53), for rheumatic aortic valve disorders 1.08 (0.99-1.18), for rheumatic tricuspid valve disorders 0.61 (0.57-0.66), for nonrheumatic mitral valve disorders 1.08 (1.06-1.10), for nonrheumatic aortic valve disorders 1.25 (1.24-1.27), for nonrheumatic tricuspid valve disorders 0.72 (0.68-0.77), and for pulmonary valve disorders 0.82 (0.75-0.90).ConclusionsWe observed certain sex differences, with, in general, a higher incidence rate among males of valvular heart disease diagnoses, but a lower risk of specific valve disorders. The underlying factors for the sex differences are unclear and need further investigation.</p>}},
  author       = {{Wändell, Per and Li, Xinjun and Carlsson, Axel C. and Sundquist, Jan and Sundquist, Kristina}},
  issn         = {{2772-963X}},
  keywords     = {{immigrants; neighborhood; rheumatic valvular heart disease; sex; socioeconomic status; valvular heart disease}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  number       = {{4}},
  publisher    = {{American College of Cardiology}},
  series       = {{JACC: Advances}},
  title        = {{Valvular Heart Diseases in Swedish Males and Females}},
  url          = {{http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jacadv.2026.102666}},
  doi          = {{10.1016/j.jacadv.2026.102666}},
  volume       = {{5}},
  year         = {{2026}},
}