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Impact of ABC (Atrial Fibrillation Better Care) pathway adherence in high-risk subgroups with atrial fibrillation: A report from the ESC-EHRA EORP-AF long-term general registry

Authors :
Wern Yew Ding
Marco Proietti
Giulio Francesco Romiti
Marco Vitolo
Ameenathul Mazaya Fawzy
Giuseppe Boriani
Francisco Marin
Carina Blomström-Lundqvist
Tatjana S. Potpara
Laurent Fauchier
Gregory Y. H Lip
Source :
Ding, W Y, Proietti, M, Romiti, G F, Vitolo, M, Fawzy, A M, Boriani, G, Marin, F, Blomström-Lundqvist, C, Potpara, T S, Fauchier, L, Lip, G Y H & ESC-EHRA EORP-AF Long-Term General Registry Investigators 2023, ' Impact of ABC (Atrial Fibrillation Better Care) pathway adherence in high-risk subgroups with atrial fibrillation : A report from the ESC-EHRA EORP-AF long-term general registry ', European Journal of Internal Medicine, vol. 107, pp. 60-65 . https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ejim.2022.11.004
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

Background: Effects of Atrial Fibrillation Better Care (ABC) adherence among high-risk atrial fibrillation (AF) subgroups remains unknown. We aimed to evaluate the impact of ABC adherence on clinical outcomes in these high-risk patients. Methods: EORP-AF General Long-Term Registry is a prospective, observational registry from 250 centres across 27 European countries. High-risk patients were defined as those with either CKD (eGFR 2), elderly patients (≥75 years) or prior thromboembolism. Primary outcome was a composite event of all-cause death, thromboembolism and acute coronary syndrome. Results: 6646 patients with AF were screened (median age was 70 [IQR 61 – 77] years; 40.2% females). There were 3304 (54.2%) patients with either CKD (n = 1750), older age (n = 2236) or prior thromboembolism (n = 728). Among these, 924 (28.0%) were managed as adherent to ABC. At 2-year follow-up, 966 (14.5%) patients reported the primary outcome. The incidence of the primary outcome was significantly lower in high-risk patients managed as adherent to ABC pathway (IRR 0.53 [95%CI, 0.43 – 0.64]). Consistent results were obtained in the individual subgroups. Using multivariable Cox proportional hazards analysis, ABC adherence in the high-risk cohort was independently associated with a lower risk of the primary outcome (aHR 0.64 [95%CI, 0.51 – 0.80]), as well as in the CKD (aHR 0.51 [95%CI, 0.37 – 0.70]) and elderly subgroups (aHR 0.69 [95%CI, 0.53 – 0.90]). Overall, there was greater reduction in the risk of primary outcome as more ABC criteria were fulfilled, both in the overall high-risk patients (aHR 0.39 [95%CI, 0.25 – 0.61]), as well as in the individual subgroups. Conclusion: In a large, contemporary cohort of patients with AF, we demonstrate that adherence to the ABC pathway was associated with a significant benefit among high-risk patients with either CKD, advanced age (≥75 years old) or prior thromboembolism.

Details

ISSN :
18790828
Volume :
107
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
European journal of internal medicine
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....9f02f9a860307fa1ba60631945c775c6
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ejim.2022.11.004