In a European registry of patients with atrial fibrillation, oral anticoagulation was used in over 80% of eligible patients, and 78.6% achieved adequate rate control.
Observational (n=7,243)
Yes
atrial fibrillation (n=7,243)
Guideline-directed management of atrial fibrillation
Management practices including antithrombotic therapy, rate control, and rhythm control
AIMS: We sought to describe the management of patients with atrial fibrillation (AF) in Europe after the release of the 2010 AF Guidelines of the European Society of Cardiology. METHODS AND RESULTS: The PREFER in AF registry enrolled consecutive patients with AF from January 2012 to January 2013 in 461 centres in seven European countries. Seven thousand two hundred and forty-three evaluable patients were enrolled, aged 71.5 ± 11 years, 60.1% male, CHA2DS2VASc score 3.4 ± 1.8 (mean ± standard deviation). Thirty per cent patients had paroxysmal, 24.0% had persistent, 7.2% had long-standing persistent, and 38.8% had permanent AF. Oral anticoagulation was used in the majority of patients: 4799 patients (66.3%) received a vitamin K antagonist (VKA) as mono-therapy, 720 patients a combination of VKA and antiplatelet agents (9.9%), 442 patients (6.1%) a new oral anticoagulant drugs (NOAC). Antiplatelet agents alone were given to 808 patients (11.2%), no antithrombotic therapy to 474 patients (6.5%). Of 7034 evaluable patients, 5530 (78.6%) patients were adequately rate controlled (mean heart rate 60-100 bpm). Half of the patients (50.7%) received rhythm control therapy by electrical cardioversion (18.1%), pharmacological cardioversion (19.5%), antiarrhythmic drugs (amiodarone 24.1%, flecainide or propafenone 13.5%, sotalol 5.5%, dronedarone 4.0%), and catheter ablation (5.0%). CONCLUSION: The management of AF patients in 2012 has adapted to recent evidence and guideline recommendations. Oral anticoagulant therapy with VKA (majority) or NOACs is given to over 80% of eligible patients, including those at risk for bleeding. Rate is often adequately controlled, and rhythm control therapy is widely used.
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Paulus Kirchhof
Electrophysiology
Bettina Ammentorp
Daiichi Sankyo (Germany)
Harald Darius
Interventional Cardiology
EP Europace
Université Paris Cité
University of Birmingham
University of Münster
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Kirchhof et al. (Tue,) conducted a observational in atrial fibrillation (n=7,243). Guideline-directed management of atrial fibrillation was evaluated on Management practices including antithrombotic therapy, rate control, and rhythm control. In a European registry of patients with atrial fibrillation, oral anticoagulation was used in over 80% of eligible patients, and 78.6% achieved adequate rate control.
synapsesocial.com/papers/6a053fc94b24269796380888 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1093/europace/eut263
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