Newly diagnosed atrial fibrillation was identified at the time of stroke in 18% (95% CI 16-21) of patients presenting with an AF-related acute ischemic stroke.
Observational (n=856)
No
Nearly 20% of AF-related strokes occur in patients without a prior AF diagnosis, despite the vast majority having a high enough pre-stroke risk to merit anticoagulation, supporting the need for pre-stroke AF screening.
BACKGROUND: Atrial fibrillation (AF) is a major cause of ischemic stroke. Individuals with undiagnosed AF lack the stroke protection afforded by oral anticoagulants. We obtained a contemporary estimate of the percentage of AF patients newly diagnosed at the time of stroke. METHODS: We identified patients admitted to the Massachusetts General Hospital (MGH) from January 1, 2010 to December 31, 2013 with acute ischemic stroke and either previously or newly diagnosed AF using hospital stroke registry data and stroke and AF ICD-9 code searches of hospital databases. Reviewers categorized AF as previously known or newly diagnosed, and collected comorbidity and outcome data. To confirm AF as newly diagnosed, we searched patients' pre-event electronic medical records (EMRs) for AF terms. RESULTS: AF was considered newly diagnosed in 156/856 patients (18%; 95% CI 16-21). In 136/156 cases, AF was diagnosed using 12-lead EKG, telemetry, or rhythm strips. New AF strokes had a median NIH stroke scale of 12; 60% had mRankin ≥3 at discharge, including 15% deaths. Pre-stroke CHA2DS2-VASc score was ≥2 in 89%. About half (76/156) had prior records in the MGH EMR. Evidence of pre-stroke AF, often peri-procedural, was found in 8/76, but the AF diagnosis was not carried forward. CONCLUSIONS: In this contemporary cohort, nearly one in 5 AF-related strokes occurred without a pre-stroke AF diagnosis. AF was readily diagnosed using standard rhythm monitoring. The vast majority of patients with newly diagnosed AF were at high enough pre-stroke risk to merit anticoagulation. In conclusion, our findings support screening for AF before stroke. Patients with past transient AF may merit more intensive screening.
Borowsky et al. (Sun,) conducted a observational in Acute ischemic stroke and atrial fibrillation (n=856). Newly diagnosed atrial fibrillation vs. Previously known atrial fibrillation was evaluated on Percentage of AF patients newly diagnosed at the time of stroke (95% CI 16-21). Newly diagnosed atrial fibrillation was identified at the time of stroke in 18% (95% CI 16-21) of patients presenting with an AF-related acute ischemic stroke.
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