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Article
Peer-Review Record

Ischemic Etiology and Prognosis in Men and Women with Acute Heart Failure

J. Clin. Med. 2021, 10(8), 1713; https://doi.org/10.3390/jcm10081713
by Lourdes Vicent 1, Jose Guerra 2,3, Rafael Vazquez-García 4, José R. Gonzalez-Juanatey 3,5, Luis Martínez Dolz 6, Javier Segovia 3,7, Domingo Pascual-Figal 8, Ramón Bover 9, Fernando Worner 10, Juan Delgado 1,3, Francisco Fernández-Avilés 3,11,12 and Manuel Martínez-Sellés 3,11,12,13,*
Reviewer 1: Anonymous
Reviewer 2: Anonymous
J. Clin. Med. 2021, 10(8), 1713; https://doi.org/10.3390/jcm10081713
Submission received: 21 March 2021 / Revised: 9 April 2021 / Accepted: 13 April 2021 / Published: 15 April 2021
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Coronary Artery Disease: The Role of Sex)

Round 1

Reviewer 1 Report

The authors well responded the reviewer's comment.

Author Response

We would like to thank Reviewer 1 by the comments that have helped us to improve our manuscript.

Reviewer 2 Report

In the paper "Ischemic etiology and prognosis in men and women with heart failure" Vicent and coll analyzed the impact of ischemic etiology on prognosis, among men and women hospitalazed for acute HF

The study is well organized and conducted and the paper is well written. Overall the paper represent a very excellence example of gender medicine.

Miinor points

  1. Since the population study consists of patients with acute heart failure I suggest to change the title in " Ischemic etiology and prognosis in men and women with acute heart failure"
  2. Please revise Table 3- Please add at table 3 number of patients with implant of left ventricular assist device at 1 month, 6 months and 12 months as well as number of patients with appropriate ICD shocks.
  3. In order to characterize better the study population please add at table 1 type and dosage of disease modifying drugs
  4. Please add a section on study limitations

 

Author Response

In the paper "Ischemic etiology and prognosis in men and women with heart failure" Vicent and coll analyzed the impact of ischemic etiology on prognosis, among men and women hospitalazed for acute HF

The study is well organized and conducted and the paper is well written. Overall the paper represent a very excellence example of gender medicine.

Thank you for this comment.

Minor points

  1. Since the population study consists of patients with acute heart failure I suggest to change the title in " Ischemic etiology and prognosis in men and women with acute heart failure"

We have changed the title according to the Reviewer suggestion as follows: “Ischemic etiology and prognosis in men and women with acute heart failure”.

 

  1. Please revise Table 3- Please add at table 3 number of patients with implant of left ventricular assist device at 1 month, 6 months and 12 months as well as number of patients with appropriate ICD shocks.

We do not have information regarding the number of patients who received a left ventricular assist device implantation, and the rate of appropriate ICD shocks was not recorded.

 

  1. In order to characterize better the study population please add at table 1 type and dosage of disease modifying drugs

The dosage of disease modifying drugs was not recorded. Table 1 includes the type of disease modifying drugs as follows:



 

Ischemic HF (N= 613)

Non-ischemic HF (N=1218)

P

Women, ischemic HF (N= 167)

Men, ischemic HF (N=446)

P

Women, non-ischemic HF (N=589)

Men, non-ischemic HF (N= 629)

P

Previous treatments:

ACEIs

ARBs

Betablockers

Ivabradine

Loop diuretics

Mineralocorticoid receptor antagonists

Digoxin

Oral anticoagulation

Aspirin

Clopidogrel

Ticagrelor

Prasugrel

 

290 (47.3)

153 (24.9)

430 (70.1)

52 (8.5)

391 (63.8)

182 (29.7)

 

47 (7.7)

213 (34.9)

343 (56.1)

149 (24.4)

9 (1.5)

17 (2.8)

 

398 (32.7)

291 (23.9)

562 (46.1)

35 (2.9)

687 (56.5)

255 (20.9)

 

151 (12.4)

507 (41.7)

294 (24.2)

48 (3.9)

0

1 (0.1)

 

<0.001

0.373

0.001

<0.001

0.004

<0.001

 

0.006

0.011

<0.001

<0.001

<0.001

<0.001

 

77 (46.1)

50 (29.9)

118 (70.7)

9 (5.4)

104 (62.3)

38 (22.8)

 

12 (7.2)

51 (30.5)

97 (58.1)

40 (24.0)

5 (3.0)

5 (3.0)

 

213 (47.8)

103 (23.1)

312 (70.1)

43 (9.6)

287 (64.4)

144 (32.3)

 

35 (7.9)

162 (36.5)

246 (55.4)

109 (24.6)

4 (0.9)

12 (2.7)

 

0.517

0.005

0.960

0.212

0.639

0.004

 

0.894

0.183

0.552

0.878

0.073

0.846

 

179 (30.4)

156 (26.5)

282 (48.0)

13 (2.2)

354 (60.1)

124 (21.1)

 

85 (14.4)

275 (46.7)

128 (21.7)

23 (3.9)

1 (0.2)

0

 

219 (34.9)

135 (21.5)

281 (44.6)

22 (3.5)

333 (53.0)

131 (20.8)

 

66 (10.5)

232 (37.1)

166 (26.5)

25 (4.0)

0

1 (0.2)

 

0.128

0.093

0.012

0.358

0.043

0.213

 

0.101

0.001

0.075

0.483

0.485

0.250

 

  1. Please add a section on study limitations

We have added a section addressing the study limitations: “Our study has some limitations. Follow-up duration was 12 months, and a longer follow-up period may have shown significant differences in outcomes according to HF etiology, and sex. The dosage of disease modifying drugs was not recorded, and we do not have information about patients who presented appropriate defibrillator shocks during follow-up.”

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