Biol Sex Differ. 2026 May 29. doi: 10.1186/s13293-026-00932-7. Online ahead of print.
ABSTRACT
Aortic stenosis (AS) presents with distinct sex-related differences in clinical manifestation, pathophysiology, and response to treatment. Women typically present at an older age, with greater frailty, more pronounced symptoms, and paradoxical low-flow AS, often associated with concentric left ventricular remodeling and fibrotic valve changes. In contrast, men show a predominance of calcific AS, eccentric remodeling, and more extensive aortic valve calcification. These differences are not solely anatomical or hemodynamic; they extend to molecular pathways and emerging contributors such as the gut microbiota.Recent evidence suggests that gut microbiota composition and its metabolites, particularly trimethylamine-N-oxide (TMAO) and indoxyl sulfate (IS), play a sex-specific role in AS pathogenesis. Women generally exhibit a more diverse and cardioprotective microbiota profile, shaped by estrogen and dietary habits, that might explain lower levels of pro-calcific metabolites and a fibrotic valve phenotype. Conversely, men tend to have higher TMAO and IS levels, driven by a Firmicutes-enriched microbiota and androgenic modulation, which might promote calcification and inflammatory signaling in the aortic valve.This review integrates current knowledge on sex-related differences in AS, spanning clinical patterns, valvular remodeling, cellular and molecular signaling, and gut-heart interactions, to propose a hypothesis-driven framework on how gut microbiota may contribute to sex-specific differences in AS.
PMID:42216102 | DOI:10.1186/s13293-026-00932-7

