Screening for atrial fibrillation to prevent stroke in elderly individuals with or without preexisting cardiovascular disease: A post hoc analysis of the randomized LOOP Study

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftTidsskriftartikelForskningfagfællebedømt

Standard

Screening for atrial fibrillation to prevent stroke in elderly individuals with or without preexisting cardiovascular disease : A post hoc analysis of the randomized LOOP Study. / Xing, Lucas Yixi; Diederichsen, Søren Zöga; Højberg, Søren; Krieger, Derk W.; Graff, Claus; Olesen, Morten S.; Brandes, Axel; Køber, Lars; Haugan, Ketil Jørgen; Svendsen, Jesper Hastrup.

I: International Journal of Cardiology, Bind 370, 2023, s. 197-203.

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftTidsskriftartikelForskningfagfællebedømt

Harvard

Xing, LY, Diederichsen, SZ, Højberg, S, Krieger, DW, Graff, C, Olesen, MS, Brandes, A, Køber, L, Haugan, KJ & Svendsen, JH 2023, 'Screening for atrial fibrillation to prevent stroke in elderly individuals with or without preexisting cardiovascular disease: A post hoc analysis of the randomized LOOP Study', International Journal of Cardiology, bind 370, s. 197-203. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ijcard.2022.10.167

APA

Xing, L. Y., Diederichsen, S. Z., Højberg, S., Krieger, D. W., Graff, C., Olesen, M. S., Brandes, A., Køber, L., Haugan, K. J., & Svendsen, J. H. (2023). Screening for atrial fibrillation to prevent stroke in elderly individuals with or without preexisting cardiovascular disease: A post hoc analysis of the randomized LOOP Study. International Journal of Cardiology, 370, 197-203. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ijcard.2022.10.167

Vancouver

Xing LY, Diederichsen SZ, Højberg S, Krieger DW, Graff C, Olesen MS o.a. Screening for atrial fibrillation to prevent stroke in elderly individuals with or without preexisting cardiovascular disease: A post hoc analysis of the randomized LOOP Study. International Journal of Cardiology. 2023;370:197-203. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ijcard.2022.10.167

Author

Xing, Lucas Yixi ; Diederichsen, Søren Zöga ; Højberg, Søren ; Krieger, Derk W. ; Graff, Claus ; Olesen, Morten S. ; Brandes, Axel ; Køber, Lars ; Haugan, Ketil Jørgen ; Svendsen, Jesper Hastrup. / Screening for atrial fibrillation to prevent stroke in elderly individuals with or without preexisting cardiovascular disease : A post hoc analysis of the randomized LOOP Study. I: International Journal of Cardiology. 2023 ; Bind 370. s. 197-203.

Bibtex

@article{7c66340d11104be19a49c1659195f928,
title = "Screening for atrial fibrillation to prevent stroke in elderly individuals with or without preexisting cardiovascular disease: A post hoc analysis of the randomized LOOP Study",
abstract = "Background: An evidence-based approach for risk stratification of subclinical atrial fibrillation (AF) and hereby AF screening is lacking. This study aimed to investigate whether established cardiovascular diseases (CVD) could help to identify the population more likely to benefit from AF screening. Methods: The LOOP Study randomized AF-na{\"i}ve individuals aged ≥70 years and with additional stroke risk factors to either screening with implantable loop recorder (ILR) and subsequent anticoagulation upon detection of new-onset AF episodes ≥6 min, or usual care. In this sub-study, all participants were divided into two risk groups according to the presence/absence of CVD (defined as ischemic heart disease, heart failure, previous stroke, valvular heart disease, or peripheral artery disease). Results: A total of 1997 (33.3%) had CVD at baseline and experienced higher incidences of stroke or systemic arterial embolism (SAE), ischemic stroke, stroke/SAE/cardiovascular death, and all-cause death (adjusted HR 1.34 [1.06–1.69], 1.31 [1.02–1.69], 1.49 [1.23–1.79], and 1.59 [1.36–1.85], respectively) than those without. For ILR screening versus usual care, there was no decrease in stroke/SAE, ischemic stroke, or stroke/SAE/cardiovascular death among participants with CVD (adjusted p-values >0.05), whereas significant reductions in these outcomes were obtained by screening among those without CVD (adjusted HR 0.64 [0.44–0.93], 0.54 [0.35–0.82], 0.64 [0.46–0.87], respectively); adjusted p-values for interaction ≤0.05. Conclusions: In an elderly, at-risk population, ILR screening did not prevent stroke significantly in individuals with CVD, whereas screening was associated with approximately 40% stroke risk reduction among those without CVD. However, these findings should be considered as hypothesis-generating and warrant further study.",
keywords = "Atrial fibrillation, Cardiovascular disease, Continuous rhythm monitoring, Stroke prevention",
author = "Xing, {Lucas Yixi} and Diederichsen, {S{\o}ren Z{\"o}ga} and S{\o}ren H{\o}jberg and Krieger, {Derk W.} and Claus Graff and Olesen, {Morten S.} and Axel Brandes and Lars K{\o}ber and Haugan, {Ketil J{\o}rgen} and Svendsen, {Jesper Hastrup}",
note = "Publisher Copyright: {\textcopyright} 2022 The Author(s)",
year = "2023",
doi = "10.1016/j.ijcard.2022.10.167",
language = "English",
volume = "370",
pages = "197--203",
journal = "International Journal of Cardiology",
issn = "0167-5273",
publisher = "Elsevier Ireland Ltd",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Screening for atrial fibrillation to prevent stroke in elderly individuals with or without preexisting cardiovascular disease

T2 - A post hoc analysis of the randomized LOOP Study

AU - Xing, Lucas Yixi

AU - Diederichsen, Søren Zöga

AU - Højberg, Søren

AU - Krieger, Derk W.

AU - Graff, Claus

AU - Olesen, Morten S.

AU - Brandes, Axel

AU - Køber, Lars

AU - Haugan, Ketil Jørgen

AU - Svendsen, Jesper Hastrup

N1 - Publisher Copyright: © 2022 The Author(s)

PY - 2023

Y1 - 2023

N2 - Background: An evidence-based approach for risk stratification of subclinical atrial fibrillation (AF) and hereby AF screening is lacking. This study aimed to investigate whether established cardiovascular diseases (CVD) could help to identify the population more likely to benefit from AF screening. Methods: The LOOP Study randomized AF-naïve individuals aged ≥70 years and with additional stroke risk factors to either screening with implantable loop recorder (ILR) and subsequent anticoagulation upon detection of new-onset AF episodes ≥6 min, or usual care. In this sub-study, all participants were divided into two risk groups according to the presence/absence of CVD (defined as ischemic heart disease, heart failure, previous stroke, valvular heart disease, or peripheral artery disease). Results: A total of 1997 (33.3%) had CVD at baseline and experienced higher incidences of stroke or systemic arterial embolism (SAE), ischemic stroke, stroke/SAE/cardiovascular death, and all-cause death (adjusted HR 1.34 [1.06–1.69], 1.31 [1.02–1.69], 1.49 [1.23–1.79], and 1.59 [1.36–1.85], respectively) than those without. For ILR screening versus usual care, there was no decrease in stroke/SAE, ischemic stroke, or stroke/SAE/cardiovascular death among participants with CVD (adjusted p-values >0.05), whereas significant reductions in these outcomes were obtained by screening among those without CVD (adjusted HR 0.64 [0.44–0.93], 0.54 [0.35–0.82], 0.64 [0.46–0.87], respectively); adjusted p-values for interaction ≤0.05. Conclusions: In an elderly, at-risk population, ILR screening did not prevent stroke significantly in individuals with CVD, whereas screening was associated with approximately 40% stroke risk reduction among those without CVD. However, these findings should be considered as hypothesis-generating and warrant further study.

AB - Background: An evidence-based approach for risk stratification of subclinical atrial fibrillation (AF) and hereby AF screening is lacking. This study aimed to investigate whether established cardiovascular diseases (CVD) could help to identify the population more likely to benefit from AF screening. Methods: The LOOP Study randomized AF-naïve individuals aged ≥70 years and with additional stroke risk factors to either screening with implantable loop recorder (ILR) and subsequent anticoagulation upon detection of new-onset AF episodes ≥6 min, or usual care. In this sub-study, all participants were divided into two risk groups according to the presence/absence of CVD (defined as ischemic heart disease, heart failure, previous stroke, valvular heart disease, or peripheral artery disease). Results: A total of 1997 (33.3%) had CVD at baseline and experienced higher incidences of stroke or systemic arterial embolism (SAE), ischemic stroke, stroke/SAE/cardiovascular death, and all-cause death (adjusted HR 1.34 [1.06–1.69], 1.31 [1.02–1.69], 1.49 [1.23–1.79], and 1.59 [1.36–1.85], respectively) than those without. For ILR screening versus usual care, there was no decrease in stroke/SAE, ischemic stroke, or stroke/SAE/cardiovascular death among participants with CVD (adjusted p-values >0.05), whereas significant reductions in these outcomes were obtained by screening among those without CVD (adjusted HR 0.64 [0.44–0.93], 0.54 [0.35–0.82], 0.64 [0.46–0.87], respectively); adjusted p-values for interaction ≤0.05. Conclusions: In an elderly, at-risk population, ILR screening did not prevent stroke significantly in individuals with CVD, whereas screening was associated with approximately 40% stroke risk reduction among those without CVD. However, these findings should be considered as hypothesis-generating and warrant further study.

KW - Atrial fibrillation

KW - Cardiovascular disease

KW - Continuous rhythm monitoring

KW - Stroke prevention

U2 - 10.1016/j.ijcard.2022.10.167

DO - 10.1016/j.ijcard.2022.10.167

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 36328113

AN - SCOPUS:85141860542

VL - 370

SP - 197

EP - 203

JO - International Journal of Cardiology

JF - International Journal of Cardiology

SN - 0167-5273

ER -

ID: 326841896