Twice-daily 30-second ECG snapshots over 2 weeks missed 48% of individuals with atrial fibrillation detected by continuous monitoring, but the missed individuals had a lower mean AF burden (0.68% vs 4%; P<0.001).
Observational (n=7,973)
Does intermittent ECG screening (30-second snapshots 1-4 times daily) accurately detect atrial fibrillation compared to 14-day continuous monitoring in asymptomatic at-risk individuals?
Intermittent ECG screening misses about half of atrial fibrillation cases compared to continuous monitoring, but predominantly misses those with a very low AF burden.
Absolute Event Rate: 52% vs 100%
AIMS: Screening for asymptomatic atrial fibrillation (AF) could prevent strokes and save lives, but the AF burden of those detected can impact prognosis. New technologies enable continuous monitoring or intermittent electrocardiogram (ECG) snapshots, however, the relationship between AF detection rates and the burden of AF found with intermittent strategies is unknown. We simulated the likelihood of detecting AF using real-world 2-week continuous ECG recordings and developed a generalizable model for AF detection strategies. METHODS AND RESULTS: From 1738 asymptomatic screened individuals, ECG data of 69 individuals (mean age 76.3, median burden 1.9%) with new AF found during 14 days continuous monitoring were used to simulate 30 seconds ECG snapshots one to four times daily for 14 days. Based on this simulation, 35-66% of individuals with AF would be detected using intermittent screening. Twice-daily snapshots for 2 weeks missed 48% of those detected by continuous monitoring, but mean burden was 0.68% vs. 4% in those detected (P < 0.001). In a cohort of 6235 patients (mean age 69.2, median burden 4.6%) with paroxysmal AF during clinically indicated monitoring, simulated detection rates were 53-76%. The Markovian model of AF detection using mean episode duration and mean burden simulated actual AF detection with ≤9% error across the range of screening frequencies and durations. CONCLUSION: Using twice-daily ECG snapshots over 2 weeks would detect only half of individuals discovered to have AF by continuous recordings, but AF burden of those missed was low. A model predicting AF detection, validated using real-world data, could assist development of optimized AF screening programmes.
Quer et al. (Wed,) conducted a observational in Asymptomatic atrial fibrillation (n=7,973). Intermittent ECG snapshots vs. Continuous ECG monitoring was evaluated on Detection of atrial fibrillation. Twice-daily 30-second ECG snapshots over 2 weeks missed 48% of individuals with atrial fibrillation detected by continuous monitoring, but the missed individuals had a lower mean AF burden (0.68% vs 4%; P<0.001).
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