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Observational Study
. 2022 Feb;122(2):277-285.
doi: 10.1055/a-1541-3885. Epub 2021 Aug 24.

Risk of Ischemic Stroke in Asymptomatic Atrial Fibrillation Incidentally Detected in Primary Care Compared with Other Clinical Presentations

Affiliations
Observational Study

Risk of Ischemic Stroke in Asymptomatic Atrial Fibrillation Incidentally Detected in Primary Care Compared with Other Clinical Presentations

Christopher Wallenhorst et al. Thromb Haemost. 2022 Feb.

Abstract

Background: It is uncertain whether stroke risk of asymptomatic ambulatory atrial fibrillation (AA-AF) incidentally detected in primary care is comparable with other clinical AF presentations in primary care or hospital.

Methods: The stoke risk of 22,035 patients with incident nonvalvular AF from the United Kingdom primary care Clinical Practice Research Datalink with linkage to hospitalization and mortality data was compared with 23,605 controls without AF (age- and sex-matched 5:1 to 5,409 AA-AF patients). Incident AF included 5,913 with symptomatic ambulatory AF (SA-AF); 4,989 with primary and 5,724 with nonprimary hospital AF discharge diagnosis (PH-AF and non-PH-AF); and 5,409 with AA-AF. Ischemic stroke adjusted subhazard ratios (aSHRs) within 3 years of AA-AF were compared with SA-AF, PH-AF, non-PH-AF, and no AF, accounting for mortality as competing risk and adjusted for ischemic stroke risk factors.

Results: There were 1,026 ischemic strokes in 49,544 person-years in patients with incident AF (crude incidence rate: 2.1 ischemic strokes/100 person-years). Ischemic stroke aSHR over 3 years showed no differences between AA-AF and SA-AF, PH-AF, and non-PH-AF groups (aSHR: 0.87-1.01 vs. AA-AF). All AF groups showed a significantly higher aSHR compared with no AF.

Conclusion: Ischemic stroke risk in patients with AA-AF incidentally detected in primary care is far from benign, and not less than incident AF presenting clinically in general practice or hospital. This provides justification for identification of previously undetected AF, e.g., by opportunistic screening, and subsequent stroke prevention with thromboprophylaxis, to reduce the approximately 10% of ischemic strokes related to unrecognized AF.

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Conflict of interest statement

C.W. and C.M. are employees of the Institute for Epidemiology, Statistics and Informatics GmbH. The Institute has received grants from Bayer, Bristol-Myers Squibb, CSL Behring, and Merz Pharma outside the submitted work. B.F. reports grants to the institution, personal fees, and nonfinancial support from Bayer Pharma AG, grants to the institution and personal fees from BMS/Pfizer, and personal fees from Daiichi-Sankyo and Omron.

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