Contemporary management of atrial fibrillation in primary and secondary care in the UK: the prospective long-term AF-GEN-UK Registry

Author:

Shantsila Alena12ORCID,Lip Gregory Y H123ORCID,Lane Deirdre A123ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Cardiovascular and Metabolic Medicine, University of Liverpool , Liverpool L7 8TX , UK

2. Liverpool Centre for Cardiovascular Science, University of Liverpool and Liverpool Heart and Chest Hospital , Liverpool L7 8TX , UK

3. Department of Clinical Medicine, Aalborg University , Aalborg , Denmark

Abstract

Abstract Aims This study established a prospective registry of contemporary management of UK patients with atrial fibrillation (AF) by cardiologists, general practitioners, and stroke, acute, and emergency medicine physicians at baseline and 1-year follow-up. Methods and results Data on patients with recently diagnosed AF (≤12 months) were collected from medical records from 101 UK sites to permit comparison of patient characteristics and treatments between specialities. The impact of guideline-adherent oral anticoagulation (OAC) use on outcomes was assessed using Cox regression analysis. One thousand five hundred and ninety-five AF patients [mean (standard deviation) age 70.5 (11.2) years; 60.1% male; 97.4% white] were recruited in June 2017–June 2018 and followed up for 1 year. Overall OAC prescription rates were 84.2% at baseline and 87.1% at 1 year, with non-vitamin K antagonist oral anticoagulants (NOACs) predominating (74.9 and 79.2% at baseline and 1 year, respectively). Vitamin K antagonist prescription was significantly higher in primary care, with NOAC prescription higher among stroke physicians. Guideline-adherent OAC (CHA2DS2-VASc ≥2) at baseline significantly reduced risk of death and stroke at 1 year [adjusted hazard ratio (95% confidence interval): 0.48 (0.27–0.84) and 0.11 (0.02–0.48), respectively]. Rhythm control is evident in ∼25%; only 1.6% received catheter ablation. Conclusion High OAC use (>80%, mainly NOACs) rates varied by speciality, with VKA prescription higher in primary care. Guideline-adherent OAC therapy at baseline was associated with significant reduction in death and stroke at 1 year, regardless of speciality. Rhythm-control management is evident in only one-quarter despite AF symptoms reported in 56.6%. This registry extends the knowledge of contemporary AF management outside cardiology and demonstrates good implementation of clinical guidelines for the management of AF, particularly for stroke prevention.

Funder

BMS/Pfizer European Thrombosis Investigator Initiated Research Program

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Physiology (medical),Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine

Reference24 articles.

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2. 2020 ESC guidelines for the diagnosis and management of atrial fibrillation developed in collaboration with the European Association for Cardio-Thoracic Surgery (EACTS): the Task Force for the diagnosis and management of atrial fibrillation of the European Society of Cardiology (ESC) developed with the special contribution of the European Heart Rhythm Association (EHRA) of the ESC;Hindricks;Eur Heart J,2021

3. Temporal trends in incidence, prevalence, and mortality of atrial fibrillation in primary care;Lane;J Am Heart Assoc,2017

4. The ABC pathway: an integrated approach to improve AF management;Lip;Nat Rev Cardiol,2017

5. 2021 Focused update consensus guidelines of the Asia Pacific Heart Rhythm Society on stroke prevention in atrial fibrillation: executive summary;Chao;Thromb Haemost,2022

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