Age-Related Variations in Takotsubo Syndrome

  • Victoria L Cammann
  • Konrad A Szawan
  • Barbara E Stähli
  • Ken Kato
  • Monika Budnik
  • Manfred Wischnewsky
  • Sara Dreiding
  • Rena A Levinson
  • Davide Di Vece
  • Sebastiano Gili
  • Rodolfo Citro
  • Eduardo Bossone
  • Michael Neuhaus
  • Jennifer Franke
  • Benjamin Meder
  • Miłosz Jaguszewski
  • Michel Noutsias
  • Maike Knorr
  • Susanne Heiner
  • Fabrizio D'Ascenzo
  • Wolfgang Dichtl
  • Christof Burgdorf
  • Behrouz Kherad
  • Carsten Tschöpe
  • Annahita Sarcon
  • Jerold Shinbane
  • Lawrence Rajan
  • Guido Michels
  • Roman Pfister
  • Alessandro Cuneo
  • Claudius Jacobshagen
  • Mahir Karakas
  • Wolfgang Koenig
  • Alexander Pott
  • Philippe Meyer
  • Marco Roffi
  • Adrian Banning
  • Mathias Wolfrum
  • Florim Cuculi
  • Richard Kobza
  • Thomas A Fischer
  • Tuija Vasankari
  • K E Juhani Airaksinen
  • L Christian Napp
  • Rafal Dworakowski
  • Philip MacCarthy
  • Christoph Kaiser
  • Stefan Osswald
  • Leonarda Galiuto
  • Christina Chan
  • Paul Bridgman
  • Daniel Beug
  • Clément Delmas
  • Olivier Lairez
  • Ekaterina Gilyarova
  • Alexandra Shilova
  • Mikhail Gilyarov
  • Ibrahim El-Battrawy
  • Ibrahim Akin
  • Karolina Poledniková
  • Petr Toušek
  • David E Winchester
  • Jan Galuszka
  • Christian Ukena
  • Gregor Poglajen
  • Pedro Carrilho-Ferreira
  • Christian Hauck
  • Carla Paolini
  • Claudio Bilato
  • Yoshio Kobayashi
  • Toshihiro Shoji
  • Iwao Ishibashi
  • Masayuki Takahara
  • Toshiharu Himi
  • Jehangir Din
  • Ali Al-Shammari
  • Abhiram Prasad
  • Charanjit S Rihal
  • Kan Liu
  • P Christian Schulze
  • Matteo Bianco
  • Lucas Jörg
  • Hans Rickli
  • Gonçalo Pestana
  • Thanh H Nguyen
  • Michael Böhm
  • Lars S Maier
  • Fausto J Pinto
  • Petr Widimský
  • Stephan B Felix
  • Ruediger C Braun-Dullaeus
  • Wolfgang Rottbauer
  • Gerd Hasenfuß
  • Burkert M Pieske
  • Heribert Schunkert
  • Martin Borggrefe
  • Holger Thiele
  • Johann Bauersachs
  • Hugo A Katus
  • John D Horowitz
  • Carlo Di Mario
  • Thomas Münzel
  • Filippo Crea
  • Jeroen J Bax
  • Thomas F Lüscher
  • Frank Ruschitzka
  • Jelena R Ghadri
  • Grzegorz Opolski
  • Christian Templin

Related Research units

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Takotsubo syndrome (TTS) occurs predominantly in post-menopausal women but is also found in younger patients.

OBJECTIVES: This study aimed to investigate age-related differences in TTS.

METHODS: Patients diagnosed with TTS and enrolled in the International Takotsubo Registry between January 2011 and February 2017 were included in this analysis and were stratified by age (younger: ≤50 years, middle-age: 51 to 74 years, elderly: ≥75 years). Baseline characteristics, hospital course, as well as short- and long-term mortality were compared among groups.

RESULTS: Of 2,098 TTS patients, 242 (11.5%) patients were ≤50 years of age, 1,194 (56.9%) were 51 to 74 years of age, and 662 (31.6%) were ≥75 years of age. Younger patients were more often men (12.4% vs. 10.9% vs. 6.3%; p = 0.002) and had an increased prevalence of acute neurological (16.3% vs. 8.4% vs. 8.8%; p = 0.001) or psychiatric disorders (14.1% vs. 10.3% vs. 5.6%; p < 0.001) compared with middle-aged and elderly TTS patients. Furthermore, younger patients had more often cardiogenic shock (15.3% vs. 9.1% vs. 8.1%; p = 0.004) and had a numerically higher in-hospital mortality (6.6% vs. 3.6% vs. 5.1%; p = 0.07). At multivariable analysis, younger (odds ratio: 1.60; 95% confidence interval: 0.86 to 3.01; p = 0.14) and older age (odds ratio: 1.09; 95% confidence interval: 0.66 to 1.80; p = 0.75) were not independently associated with in-hospital mortality using the middle-aged group as a reference. There were no differences in 60-day mortality rates among groups.

CONCLUSIONS: A substantial proportion of TTS patients are younger than 50 years of age. TTS is associated with severe complications requiring intensive care, particularly in younger patients.

Bibliographical data

Original languageEnglish
ISSN0735-1097
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 28.04.2020
PubMed 32327096