1. One‐year outcomes of rate versus rhythm control of atrial fibrillation in the Kerala‐AF Registry
- Author
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Calvert, Peter, Chen, Yang, Gue, Ying, Gupta, Dhiraj, Azariah, Jinbert Lordson, George Koshy, A., Zachariah, Geevar, Lip, Gregory Y. H., Gopalan, Bahuleyan Charantharayil, Namboodiri, Narayanan, Jabir, A., George Koshy, A., Zachariah, Geevar, Shifas Babu, M., Venugopal, K., Punnose, Eapen, Natarajan, K. U., Joseph, Johny, Ashokan Nambiar, C., Jayagopal, P. B., Mohanan, P. P., George, Raju, Unni, Govindan, Sajeev, C. G., Syam, N., Roby, Anil, Daniel, Rachel, Krishnakumar, V. V., Pillai, Anand M., Joseph, Stigi, Mini, G. K., Koya, Shaffi Fazaludeen, Eapen, Koshy, Ram, Raghu, Mathew, Cibu, Faizal, Ali, Issac, Biju, Renga, Sujay, Menon, Jaideep, Harikrishna, D., Suresh, K., Nair, Tiny, Susanth, S. S., Anil Kumar, R., Abilash, T. P., Sreekala, P., Rajeev, E., Raj, Arun, Naik, Ramdas, Rajalekshmi, Gopinath, Anoop, Binu, R., Chacko, Jossy, Iqbal, P. T., Sudhir, N. M., Sreedharan, Madhu, Balakrishnan, N., Musthaffa, Muhammed, Jayakumar, B., George, Sheeba, Kumar, Anand, Mathew, Thomas, Pramod, V. K., Shaloob, Muhammed, Chandy, Madhu Paulose, Vinod, K. R., Sajan Ahamad, Z., and Mathew, Pramod
- Abstract
There is ongoing debate around rate versus rhythm control strategies for managing atrial fibrillation (AF), however, much of the data comes from Western cohorts. Kerala‐AF represents the largest prospective AF cohort study from the Indian subcontinent. To compare 12‐month outcomes between rate and rhythm control strategies. Patients aged ≥18 years with non‐transient AF were recruited from 53 hospitals across Kerala. Patients were stratified by rate or rhythm control. The primary outcome was a composite of all‐cause mortality, arterial thromboembolism, acute coronary syndrome or hospitalization due to heart failure or arrhythmia at 12 months. Secondary outcomes included bleeding events and individual components of the primary. Predictors of the composite outcome were analysed by logistic regression. A total of 2901 patients (mean age 64.6 years, 51% female) were included (2464 rate control, 437 rhythm control). Rates of the primary composite outcome did not differ between groups (29.7% vs 30.0%; p= .955), nor did any component of the primary. Bleeding outcomes were also similar (1.6% vs 1.9%; p= .848). Independent predictors of the primary composite outcome were older age (aOR 1.01; p= .013), BMI <18 (aOR 1.51; p= .025), permanent AF (aOR 0.78; p= .010), HFpEF (aOR 1.40; p= .023), HFrEF (aOR 1.39; p= .004), chronic kidney disease (aOR 1.36; p< .001), and prior thromboembolism (aOR 1.31; p= .014). In the Kerala‐AF registry, 12‐month outcomes did not differ between rate and rhythm control cohorts. No significant difference was found between rate and rhythm control approaches to atrial fibrillation management in the 1‐year follow‐up of the Kerala‐AF cohort. Independent predictors of adverse outcomes included age, underweight BMI, heart failure, and chronic renal failure.
- Published
- 2024
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