Quick Dive: Antithrombotic drugs for acute coronary syndromes in women

 

In our "Quick Dive" series, the authors of publications from medical societies summarise the most important information and results of the respective publication. This time we dive into:

 

Antithrombotic drugs for acute coronary syndromes in women: sex-adjusted treatment and female representation in randomised clinical trials

A clinical consensus statement of the European Association of Percutaneous Cardiovascular Interventions (EAPCI) and the ESC Working Group on Thrombosis

20 May 2025 | Written by: Valeria Paradies, Giulia Masiero, Andrea Rubboli, Heleen M.M. Van Beusekom, Francesco Costa, Piera Capranzano, Sophie Degrauwe, Diana A. Gorog, Claudia Moreira Jorge, Gill Louise Buchanan, Mirvat Alasnag, Daniela Trabattoni, Chiara Fraccaro, Dirk Sibbing, Dariusz Dudek, Gemma Vilahur, Alaide Chieffo, Roxana Mehran, Davide Capodanno, Emanuele Barbato and Jolanta M. Siller-Matula


By:

Martin Nölke

HERZMEDIZIN editorial team

 

2025-08-14

 

Image source (image above): vovan / Shutterstock.com (edited)

5 questions for the first author

Dr. Valeria Paradies, Maasstad Hospital, Rotterdam, The Netherlands

 

What is the reason for and aim of the publication?

 

The publication aims to offer expert, evidence-based guidance on tailoring antithrombotic therapy for women with acute coronary syndromes (ACS), recognising their distinct ischemic and bleeding risk profiles. It seeks to raise awareness of sex-specific risks and potential biases in ACS management, with particular emphasis on bleeding mitigation strategies, antithrombotic use in special clinical scenarios such as myocardial infarction with non-obstructive coronary arteries (MINOCA), and the persistent under-representation of women in cardiovascular trials. By providing consensus statements informed by the best available evidence, the manuscript strives to optimise sex-specific antithrombotic management and reduce disparities in outcomes between women and men.

 

What are the most important take-home messages?

 

  1. Individualise dosing and access strategy – women have a higher bleeding risk; adjust antithrombotic doses for weight, renal function, and age, use bleeding risk scores, and favour radial over femoral access to minimise complications.
  2. Tailor therapy to clinical context — apply sex-specific considerations in ACS subtypes (e.g., SCAD, MINOCA, vasospastic/microvascular angina, Takotsubo), and in special situations such as pregnancy, with cautious selection and monitoring of agents.
  3. Close the evidence gap by improving female representation in clinical trials.
Barriers and interventions to improve the recruitment of women in cardiovascular trials

Fig.: Current barriers and potential interventions to improve the recruitment of women in cardiovascular trials.

Factors contributing to these barriers include under-recognition of sex-specific disease patterns, referral and enrolment biases, and stringent exclusion criteria. Proposed solutions include targeted investigator training, sex-specific eligibility adjustments, community engagement, and prespecified enrolment targets to ensure adequate female representation. 

© European Society of Cardiology 2025. Eur Heart J, Volume 46, Issue 28, 21 July 2025, Pages 2730–2741, https://doi.org/10.1093/eurheartj/ehaf352

 

What are challenges in practical implementation – and possible solutions?

 

  • Physician awareness gap and unconscious bias → implement targeted education and training programmes to improve recognition of sex-specific ACS presentations and risks.
  • Under-representation of women in trials → mandate prespecified enrollment targets, broaden eligibility criteria, and design women-specific or pregnancy-conscious studies.
  • Logistical barriers to trial participation (e.g., travel, caregiving responsibilities) → offer remote monitoring options, flexible scheduling, and logistical or financial support.
  • Referral and enrollment gaps → involve primary care physicians and family members early in the trial screening process, and use community engagement to improve trust and participation.
  • Better assessment of baseline bleeding risk in women → standardise weight- and renal-adjusted dosing protocols, embed bleeding risk scoring in clinical workflows, and promote radial access as default.

 

Which issues still need to be tackled, that are not yet addressed by the paper?

 

  • High-quality RCT data tailored to SCAD, MINOCA, vasospastic/microvascular angina, and TTS.
  • Optimal antithrombotic choices and dosing during pregnancy and lactation across ACS scenarios.
  • Clearer evidence for sex-specific thresholds within bleeding/ischemic risk scores used to guide duration/intensity.

 

What further developments on the topic are emerging?

 

  • Trial design goals: prespecified sex-stratified randomization/enrollment targets; transparent sex-specific efficacy/safety reporting.
  • Access and dosing quality programmes embedding weight/renal-based dosing and radial-first pathways.
  • Novel agents/approaches and precision dosing that may reduce bleeding while preserving efficacy (e.g., better monitoring frameworks in pregnancy and low-weight patients

Continue to the publication:

Clinical consensus statement: Antithrombotic drugs for acute coronary syndromes in women

Valeria Paradies, Giulia Masiero, Andrea Rubboli et al. Antithrombotic drugs for acute coronary syndromes in women: sex-adjusted treatment and female representation in randomised clinical trials. A clinical consensus statement of the European Association of Percutaneous Cardiovascular Interventions (EAPCI) and the ESC Working Group on Thrombosis. European Heart Journal, Volume 46, Issue 28, 21 July 2025, Pages 2730–2741, https://doi.org/10.1093/eurheartj/ehaf352

 

About the author

Dr. Valeria Paradies

Dr. Valeria Paradies is an interventional cardiologist and Head of the Research Department at Maasstad Hospital in Rotterdam, Netherlands. She currently serves as EAPCI Chair of the Congress Committee and is a member of the ESC Clinical Practice Committee. She is global principal investigator of the Compare STEMI One study, which focuses on complete revascularization, imaging-guided interventions, and short-duration DAPT in STEMI patients.


ESC Document types

Document types published by the ESC, Associations, Councils, Working Groups, and ESC Committees (according to the ESC Scientific Documents Policy):

ESC Clinical Practice Guidelines present the official ESC position on key topics in cardiovascular medicine. They are based on the assessment of published evidence and consensus by an independent group of experts. The documents include standardized, graded recommendations for clinical practice and indicate the level of supporting evidence.

ESC Pocket Guidelines provide a compact, practice-oriented summary of the full guideline, including all recommendation classes and levels of evidence.

Clinical Consensus Statements provide guidance for clinical management on topics not covered or not covered in sufficient detail in existing or upcoming ESC Clinical Practice Guidelines by evaluating scientific evidence or exploring expert consensus in a structured way. 

Scientific Consensus Statements interpret scientific evidence and provide a summary position on the topic without specific advice for clinical practice.

Statements outline and convey the organisation’s position or policy on non-medical issues such as education, advocacy and ethical considerations.

ESC Quality Indicators enable healthcare providers to develop valid and feasible metrics to measure and improve the quality of cardiovascular care and describe, in a specific clinical situation, aspects of the process of care that are recommended (or not recommended) to be performed.

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