| Literature DB >> 23400444 |
Abstract
This systematic review assessed the impact of atrial fibrillation (AF) and pharmacotherapy on health-related quality of life (HRQOL) in elderly patients. Highly prevalent in the elderly, AF is associated with morbidity and symptoms affecting HRQOL. A PubMed and EMBASE search (1999-2010) was conducted using the terms atrial fibrillation, elderly, quality of life, Medicare, and Medicaid. In all, 504 articles were identified and 15 were selected (studies examining pharmacotherapy [rate or rhythm control] and HRQOL in AF patients with a mean age ≥ 65 years). Information, including study design, cohort size, and HRQOL instruments utilized, was extracted. Five observational studies, 5 randomized trials comparing rate and rhythm control, 3 randomized trials investigating pharmacologic agents, and 2 trials examining HRQOL, depression, and anxiety were identified. Elderly AF patients had reduced HRQOL versus patients in normal sinus rhythm, particularly in domains related to physical functioning. HRQOL may be particularly affected in older AF patients. Although data do not indicate whether a pharmacologic intervention or single treatment strategy-namely rate versus rhythm control-is better at improving HRQOL, either of these strategies and many pharmacologic interventions may improve HRQOL in elderly AF patients. Based on reviewed data, an algorithm is suggested to optimize HRQOL among elderly patients.Entities:
Keywords: aged; antiarrhythmic agents; arrhythmia; atrial fibrillation; health-related quality of life
Year: 2013 PMID: 23400444 PMCID: PMC3563302 DOI: 10.4137/CMC.S10628
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Clin Med Insights Cardiol ISSN: 1179-5468
Figure 1Literature search flow diagram.
Health-related quality of life (HRQOL) instrument descriptions.
| – | Cantril Ladder of Life | Higher score = more favorable HRQOL | Vertical boxed “ladder” with numbers within boxes ranging from 1 (“worst possible life”) to 10 (“best possible life”); patients write the number of the step on which they feel they currently stand, previously stood, and would stand at 3 points in time (present, 5 years previously, and 5 years hence). |
| QLI | Quality of Life Index (Cardiac Version) | Higher scores = greater satisfaction with HRQOL domains important to the patient | Assesses patient satisfaction and importance of 4 HRQOL factors: health and functioning, socioeconomic, psychological/spiritual, and family. |
| AFQLQ | Japanese Society of Electrocardiology’s Atrial Fibrillation QoL Questionnaire | Higher score = well health status | Contains 3 subscales, one of which assesses anxiety and limitation of daily activities related to AF and its treatment. |
| BDI | Beck Depression Inventory | Higher score = greater depression | Measures behavioral manifestations of depression using an inventory of 21 categories of symptoms and attitudes; 13-item short version is derived from the BDI. |
| BMQ | Beliefs About Medicines Questionnaire | Higher scores = stronger beliefs | Questionnaire based on 16 statements regarding beliefs about specific medications prescribed for the patient (BMQ-specific) and 18 statements regarding beliefs about medicine in general (BMQ-general). The BMQ-specific includes two 5-item factors: specific necessity (present and future need for prescribed medication for health) and specific concern (concern for potential long-term dependence and toxicity); the BMQ-general includes two 4-item factors: general harm (harmfulness, addictiveness, and poisonousness) and general overuse (over-prescribed and over-relied upon by physicians). |
| COOP | Dartmouth Primary Care Cooperative Information Project Chart | Higher scores = less favorable HRQOL | Assesses physical fitness, social activities, daily activities, feelings, overall health, pain, change in health, social support, and quality of life. |
| DASI | Duke Activity Status Index | Calculated score used to estimate peak oxygen capacity | Weighted 12-question survey of activities of daily living including personal care, ambulation, household tasks, sexual function, and recreational activities. |
| DUKE | Duke Health Profile | High scores = good health for health measures, poor health for dysfunction measures | Includes 10 measures: 6 health (physical, mental, social, general, perceived, and self-esteem) and 4 dysfunctions (anxiety, depression, pain, and disability). |
| IPQ | Illness Perception Questionnaire | Each scale summed and ordered separately; cause-of-illness scale not summed | Includes 5 scales that assess the components of illness: symptoms (12 items), consequences (physical, social, or economic; 7 items), cause (internal or external; 10 items), time-line (short, long, or permanent; 3 items), and control or cure (6 items). |
| MLWHF | Minnesota Living with Heart Failure Questionnaire | Higher scores = poorer HRQOL | Measures effects of heart failure and its treatment on patient HRQOL. |
| PSS | Perceived Stress Scale | Higher scores = greater perceived stress | Includes 14 items regarding global measure of perceived stress. |
| SAS | Specific Activity Scale | Higher classification = poorer activity level | Questions assess the patient’s ability to perform activities of daily living; answers to questions dictate the functional classification (I through IV) of the patient according to the Canadian Cardiovascular Society. |
| SF-36 and SF-12 | Medical Outcomes Study 36-Item Short-Form Health Survey | Higher scores = better HRQOL | The SF-36 includes 36 questions assessing health status in 8 domains: PCS (physical component summary): Physical Functioning, Role-Physical, Bodily Pain, and General Health Perceptions; MCS (mental component summary): Social Functioning, General Mental Health, Role-Emotional, and Vitality. The SF-12 includes 12 questions derived from the SF-36, yielding PCS and MCS scale results. |
| STAI | State-Trait Anxiety Inventory | Higher scores = higher state of anxiety | Includes 2 self-report scales comprising 20 questions each. The State Anxiety scale includes questions regarding how the patient currently feels, and the Trait Anxiety scale includes questions regarding how the patient generally feels. |
| YPAS | Yale Physical Activity Survey | Activities gauged by hours/week and kilocalories/week; higher values = more favorable activity level | Assessment of total time, energy expenditure, frequency, and duration of activities (eg, work, yard work, caretaking, exercise, recreation). |
Description of studies.
| Perret Guillaume et al | AF: 72.3 ± 3.9 | Total: 164 | Inpatients aged ≥65 y presenting with AF at admission | 3 controls per patient; inpatients without cardiac arrhythmia | SF-36, including PCS and MCS; Duke Health Profile | N/A | AF patients had lower scores than matched controls in >70% of dimensions (8/10 Duke subscales and 6/8 SF-36 domains); SF-36 PCS and MCS showed no significant difference between AF patients and controls; in Duke Health Profile, statistical significance was reached in the Mental ( | Study had a small sample size. Cross-sectional design did not allow conclusions on causal relationships. Hospitalization could have negatively affected HRQOL. |
| Howes et al | AF: 77 ± 7.2 | Total: 100 | Aged ≥60 y; persistent AF for ≥6 mo | Aged ≥60 y; documented SR for previous 6 mo; no history of AF or symptomatic arrhythmia | SF-36, including PCS and MCS; Yale Physical Activity Survey | N/A | SF-36 PCS and MCS did not show a significant difference between groups. PCS (43.0 vs. 45.9, | Only 1 HRQOL measurement was used. Study used a small cohort of patients. It is likely that sicker AF patients (ie, patients recently hospitalized) were excluded from study. |
| Kang et al | 67 (74.1% ≥60 y) | 81 | Aged ≥18 y; newly diagnosed (≤6 mo) AF | General US population | SF-36, including PCS and MCS; SCL | N/A | Lower physical and mental scores reported in patients with newly diagnosed AF vs. general US population (physical health, 38.53 vs. 50.0; mental health, 48.74 vs. 50.00). Frequency and severity of symptoms per the SCL were significantly ( | No major study limitations were noted. |
| Paquette et al | Women: 68 ± 9 | Total: 170 | Aged >18 y; symptomatic paroxysmal or persistent AF without long-term (>4 wk) treatment | Population survey data; men vs. women | SF-36, including PCS and MCS; DASI; SCL; AFSS | 3 mo, 12 mo | Physical health summary improved significantly from baseline to 3-mo visit for women (36.5 ± 9.0 to 39.5 ± 8.0), but less improvement was observed in men (45.2 ± 7.9 to 46.4 ± 9.0) ( | Women were significantly older than men. Significant baseline differences were noted for men vs. women. |
| Reynolds et al | Women: 69 ± 13 | Total: 963 | Aged >65 y; new-onset AF | Aged ≤65 years; new-onset AF | SF-12; SCL; AFSS | 12 mo; up to 30 mo follow-up | Patients aged >65 y reported lower HRQOL scores for general health and physical functioning but higher scores for mental health (regression coefficients: PCS, −1.4 [ | Surveillance methods for AF recurrence, which relied on symptoms and patient self-reports, probably underestimated AF episodes. |
| Ogawa et al | Overall: 64.7 ± 11.3 | Overall: 823 | Patients with paroxsymal AF (PAF); PAF was defined as AF expected to convert spontaneously to SR within 48 hours of onset | Rate vs. rhythm control | Japanese Society of Electrocardiology Atrial Fibrillation Quality of Life Questionnaire (AFQLQ) | ∼19 months | Frequency of Symptoms scores were better in rhythm control group than in rate control group ( | Therapeutic strategies were not blinded to physicians and patients. |
| Jenkins et al | 70 ± 9 | 716 | AF likely to be recurrent or cause illness or death, including those aged ≥65 y or with risk factors for stroke or death | Rate vs. rhythm control; AF vs. SR | Perceived health; Cantril Ladder of Life; SF-36; QOL Index; SCL | 48 mo | Ratings of perceived health deemed “excellent” or “very good” did not differ from baseline over time. Patient HRQOL ratings of present life satisfaction were significantly improved from baseline at all time points ( | Not all data sets were complete for each patient at each time point, mainly due to patient refusal to complete forms. Differences between the 2 study groups in terms of unmeasured variables may have existed. Results can only be generalized to the specific patient profiles in the AFFIRM trial. |
| Carlsson et al | Rate: 66 | Total: 200 | ≥18 y; persistent AF with moderate to high risk of recurrence | Rate vs. rhythm control | SF-36 | 36 mo | Two HRQOL measures, assessed by SF-36, significantly improved vs. baseline in rhythm control group vs. 5 measures in rate control group ( | Multivariate analyses were not available. Patient population studied represents a negative selection in the context of SR maintenance, resulting from factors such as long duration of AF before randomization. Neither limitation significantly impacts the HRQOL measures described. |
| Hagens et al | Rate: 69 ± 9 | Total: 352 | Recurrent, persistent AF | Rate vs. rhythm control | SF-36 | 36 mo | At end of study, no significant differences were found between the 2 groups for any of the 8 subscales on the SF-36. At 12 mo, HRQOL improved significantly from baseline ( | 80% of patients also had underlying heart disease, which may have impacted physical and mental health HRQOL scores. Use of SF-36 may not cover all relevant aspects of HRQOL in this patient population. |
| Shelton et al | Total: 72 ± 7 | Total: 61 | Aged ≥18 y; persistent AF and CHF (NYHA symptom class ≥II) with evidence of LVD | Rate vs. rhythm control; AF vs. SR | SF-36; MLWHF | 12 mo | Rhythm control group had significantly greater improvement in HRQOL over 1 y vs. rate control group using SF-36 ( | Study was not blinded, potentially introducing patient and observer bias. |
| Dorian et al | Overall: 65 ± 10 | Total: 264 | Symptomatic AF; naive to long-term (>4-wk) antiarrhythmic therapy | Amiodarone, sotalol, propafenone; AF recurrence vs. no recurrence | SF-36, including PCS and MCS; DASI; SCL; AFSS | 12 mo | No significant between-group differences were found regarding HRQOL improvements. SF-36 physical (41.9 ± 9.6 to 43.7 ± 9.2, | HRQOL improvement may have been an artifact of changes from symptomatic events to asymptomatic events. |
| Singh et al | AF: 66 ± 10 | Total: 624 | Persistent AF | AF vs. SR | SF-36; SCL; SAS; AFSS; EP | 8 wk and 12 mo | Groups (AF, SR) compared were not constructed by randomization. | |
| Tsuneda et al | Overall: 67 ± 8 | Total: 29 | Permanent AF with resting heart rate of 60–80 bpm with digitalis >6 mo | Digitalis, BB, CA | SF-36 including PCS and MCS; AFQLQ | 73–79 days | BB use after ≥6 mo of digitalis treatment did not significantly affect HRQOL scores. CA use resulted in significant improvements in physical functioning and the AF HRQOL questionnaire (Q1–6). | Selection bias may have been introduced through specific patient inclusion criteria (maintained on digitalis for >6 mo). Only monotherapy with study drug was analyzed, although combination therapy is commonly utilized. Study duration utilized was short, included too few women, and examined a small total number of patients. |
| Lane et al | 71 ± 9 | 70 | Aged ≥18 y; newly referred lone AF (≤4 wk) | Age-matched general population norms; baseline vs. time points assessed | BDI-SF-13; STAI; PSS; SF-36; IPQ; BMQ | 12 mo | Significant decreases in AF patient perceptions of general health were observed between baseline and 12 mo ( | Possible geographic bias was introduced, as all patients were from a single clinic. Patients were all Caucasian and lone AF patients without other comorbid conditions, thereby limiting the ability to generalize results to all AF patients. Study design was longitudinal, with only 70% of patients completing assessments at all time points. |
| Thrall et al | AF: 66 ± 11 | Total: 198 | Aged ≥18 y; AF; naive to previous electrical cardioversion | Age- and sex- matched patients in SR with essential HTN | BDI; STAI; Dartmouth COOP charts | 6 mo | At baseline, AF and hypertensive patients had similar levels of depression and HRQOL. Higher levels of trait anxiety were observed in AF patients at baseline. Of AF patients reporting high levels of anxiety at baseline, 53% had persistent elevated anxiety at 6 mo; 53% also had persistent significant levels of depression at 6 mo. HRQOL, depression, and anxiety did not change significantly between baseline and 6 mo. Overall, about one third of AF patients experienced elevated levels of depression and anxiety persisting at 6 mo. Symptoms of depression were the strongest independent predictor of future HRQOL. | No major study limitations were noted. |
Abbreviations: BB, beta blocker; SCL, Symptom Checklist: Frequency and Severity; EP, exercise performance.
Figure 2An algorithm designed to optimize HRQOL among elderly patients with AF.