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X CONFERENCE: ALL ABOUT THE CHROMOSOMES
WASHINGTON, D.C.
— A packed house of researchers, clinicians, physicians, and non-profit
professionals joined the Society for Women’s Health Research (SWHR) for its 2nd
annual What a Difference an X Makes: the
State of Women’s Health Research scientific conference at the Barbara Jordan
Conference Center
in Washington,
DC on Friday, July
16.
Leading physicians
and researchers from across the country congregated in Washington to share new findings and
groundbreaking studies in sex-differences research. The conference covered pain
and the musculoskeletal system, the brain, the immune system, Hypoactive Sexual
Desire Disorder (HSDD), cardiovascular disease and therapeutics, and obesity
and comorbidities. These topic areas
featured speakers from a wide range of backgrounds and institutions that
enriched the dialogue throughout the day.
Highlighting the
most recent research on sex and gender differences in knee osteoarthritis, Mary
O’Connor, M.D., chair of the Department of Orthopedic Surgery at the Mayo
Clinic in Florida,
engaged the audience with information on physician bias and whether or not
discrimination against women is unconscious or overt. In fact, physicians tend
overwhelmingly to recommend men for surgery but not women, even when presented
with the same symptoms and conditions. O’Connor shared “that despite identical
clinical information, the presentation style of male and female patients may
have differed due to the fact women are more narrative, personal and open while
men are more business-like, factual and reserved.”
Hypoactive Sexual
Desire Disorder, one of the more taboo subjects of the conference but arguably
the most dynamic presentation, was given by leading researcher Sheryl
Kingsberg, Ph.D., professor of Reproductive Biology at Case Western Reserve University
School of Medicine and chief of the Division of Behavioral Medicine at University Hospitals
Case Medical
Center. “There are
many models of the human sexual response, not one being all encompassing,” said
Kingsberg. “Because of this, the estimated 43% of all women who experience some
sexual dysfunction in their lifetime have a variety of treatment options to
follow.”
One of the most
important panels of the day was Reducing
Cardiovascular Disease in Women – We’ve Come a Long Way Baby but We’re Not
There Yet, presented by Virginia Miller, MBA, Ph.D., professor of Surgery
and Physiology, College of Medicine at the Mayo Clinic, and President of the
Organization for the Study of Sex Differences (OSSD).
Miller included the latest statistics from the American Heart Association on cardiovascular disease mortality trends, noting the number
of deaths from heart disease appears to be declining, but the total number of deaths from all cardiovascular diseases in women still exceeds that of men. Heart
disease is still the number one killer of women, yet clinical trials do not
support this fact. In a 2010 study of affected patient populations and
inclusion in randomized clinical trials of cardiovascular disease prevention,
women comprised 51% of the patient population for heart failure, but only 29%
of the trial; women were also 46% of the coronary artery disease population,
but only 25% of the clinical trial and so on.
“We’re not there
yet,” said Miller. We need age and sex specific animals in preclinical studies,
research into sex differences, integration of basic and clinical scientists,
sex specific reporting in clinical trials, and more women in clinical
trials.
The X Conference is a major step towards
bridging the research gap on biology-based diseases and bringing together the
top researchers in the sex-based biology field to share their new data. Sex differences research needs to be a top
priority in both private and public research.
Because in the end, it’s all about the chromosomes.
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For more information
on the Society for Women’s Health Research please contact Rachel Griffith
at 202-496-5001 or Rachel@swhr.org.
The Society for
Women’s Health Research (SWHR), a national
non-profit organization based in Washington D.C.,
is widely recognized as the thought leader in women’s health research,
particularly how sex differences impact health. SWHR’s mission is to improve
the health of all women through advocacy, education and research. Visit SWHR’s
website at swhr.org for more information.
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