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Detection of subclinical atrial fibrillation after cryptogenic stroke using implantable cardiac monitors

Authors :
Chiara Stegagno
Martina Rafanelli
Giovanni B. Forleo
Massimiliano Maines
Alessandro Adami
Andrea Ungar
Stefano Forlivesi
Leonardo Pantoni
Francesca Pescini
Massimiliano Faustino
Alfredo Petrone
Giovanni Morani
Anna Poggesi
Giulio Molon
Caterina Tomaselli
Maria Vittoria De Angelis
Source :
European journal of internal medicine. 92
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

Background Implantable cardiac monitor (ICM) revealed subclinical atrial fibrillation (SCAF) in up to 30% of cryptogenic stroke (CS) patients in randomized trials. However, real world data are limited. Objectives We investigated SCAF occurrence, treatments, clinical outcomes and predictors of SCAF in a multicenter real-world population subjected to ICM after CS. Methods From September 2016 to November 2019, 20 Italian centers collected data of consecutive patients receiving ICM after CS and followed with remote and outpatient follow-up according to clinical practice. All device-detected AF events were confirmed by the cardiologist to diagnose SCAF. Results ICM was implanted in 334 CS patients (mean age±SD 67.4±11.5 years, 129 (38.6%) females, 242 (76.1%) with CHA2DS2-VASC score≥4). During a follow-up of 23.6 (IQR 14.6-31.5) months, SCAF was diagnosed in 92 (27.5%) patients. First episode was asymptomatic in 81 (88.1%). SCAF daily burden ≥5 minutes was 22.0%, 24.1% and 31.5% at 6, 12, and 24 months after ICM implantation. Median time to first day with AF was 60 (IQR 18-140) days. Female gender, age>69 years, PR interval>160 ms and cortical-subcortical infarct type at enrolment were independently associated with an increased risk of SCAF. Conclusions In a real-world population, ICM detected SCAF in more than a quarter of CS patients. This experience confirms the relevance of implanting CS patients, for maximizing the possibilities to detect AF, following failure of Holter monitoring, according to guidelines. However, there is need to demonstrate that shift to oral anticoagulation following SCAF detection is associated with reduced risk of recurrent stroke.

Details

ISSN :
18790828
Volume :
92
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
European journal of internal medicine
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....47119e88cf4c476ffe65dd82c1e6dc7d