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Addressing sex and gender differences in stroke risk and management: A scientific statement from the World Stroke Organization

Version 2 2025-12-09, 21:50
Version 1 2025-11-13, 23:53
journal contribution
posted on 2025-12-09, 21:50 authored by Cheryl Carcel, Else Charlotte Sandset, Mariam Ali, Maria Ignacia Allende Echanez, Maria Giulia Mosconi, Ana Claudia de Souza, Lachlan L Dalli, Paula Munoz Venturelli, Yuki Sakamoto, Ahmed Nasreldein, Amy YX Yu, Silke Walter, Natasha A Lannin, Avril Drummond, Valeria Caso, Suvarna Alladi, Cheryl D Bushnell, Mathew J Reeves, Seana GallSeana Gall
This World Stroke Organization Scientific Statement highlights how sex and gender differences shape stroke risk, treatment, care and research. Estrogen confers a relative protection before menopause, with risk increasing thereafter. Beyond shared cardiovascular determinants (hypertension, atrial fibrillation, and diabetes), women face sex-specific risks-hypertensive disorders of pregnancy, menopause, and hormone therapy, with clear implications for stroke prevention and management. Despite comparable efficacy of acute and secondary stroke therapies in women and men, women are less likely to receive timely acute treatment and often experience delays in recognition and access. The statement recommends gender-responsive prevention and care pathways; systematic consideration of pregnancy-related and menopausal factors; public and professional education to improve stroke symptom recognition and purposeful inclusion of women across the research continuum. By integrating evidence from epidemiology, acute care, and secondary prevention, this statement provides clear and timely guidance for reducing inequities and shaping future research and policy to achieve equitable stroke care globally.

Funding

Reducing the impact of cardiovascular disease through better primary and secondary prevention : Heart Foundation | 108524-2024_FLF

Select Foundation Fellowship : The Select Foundation

Synergies TO Prevent stroke - STOPstroke : National Health & Medical Research Council | 1182071

History

Sub-type

  • Article

Publication title

International Journal of Stroke

Medium

Print-Electronic

Article number

17474930251393009

Pagination

21

eISSN

1747-4949

ISSN

1747-4930

Department/School

Menzies Institute for Medical Research

Publisher

SAGE PUBLICATIONS LTD

Publication status

  • Published online

Place of publication

United States

Event Venue

The George Institute for Global Health, UNSW Sydney, Australia.

Rights statement

© 2025 World Stroke Organization

UN Sustainable Development Goals

3 Good Health and Well Being, 4 Quality Education