Literature DB >> 23799561

Atrial fibrillation practice patterns among cardiac electrophysiologists and cardiologists.

Tonye Teme1, Jeffrey J Goldberger.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Treatment paradigms for atrial fibrillation (AF) are highly variable. This study explores the management practices for AF between general cardiologists and electrophysiologists in an academic institution.
METHODS: One hundred and eighty eight patients with AF who had primary outpatient evaluation by either a cardiologist (n = 94) or electrophysiologist (n = 94) in 2008 were selected from the Northwestern electronic medical record and included in the study. Chart review was used to determine the type of therapy, methods of monitoring AF, antiarrhythmic drug use patterns and outcome.
RESULTS: Patients seen by cardiologists vs. electrophysiologists were older (70.3 ± 11.8 vs. 65.3 ± 10.3, p = 0.002) and had more diabetes (21.3% vs. 10.6%, p = 0.046), renal disease (29.0% vs. 9.2%, p = 0.001) and coronary artery disease (40.4% vs. 23.4%, p = 0.01). A rate control strategy was used more often (80.9% vs. 54.3%, p < 0.001), and antiarrhythmics were prescribed less (10.6% vs. 31.9%, p < 0.001) by cardiologists than electrophysiologists. Antiarrhythmic choices were amiodarone (33.3%), sotalol (20.0%), flecainide (13.3%), propafenone (13.3%), and dofetilide (23.3%) for electrophysiologists, and were limited to amiodarone (80%) and sotalol (20%) for cardiologists. After a mean follow-up of 14.0 ± 11.6 and 12.8 ± 11.1 months (p = 0.44) for patients managed by cardiologists and electrophysiologists, mortality was 13.8% and 6.4% (p = 0.09), respectively. Long-term ambulatory electrocardiogram monitoring was used more frequently by electrophysiologists (74.4%) than by cardiologists (55.6%, p = 0.15).
CONCLUSIONS: Practice patterns for treatment of AF significantly differ between electrophysiologists and cardiologists. Understanding specialist treatment patterns will help optimize individualized therapy for treatment of AF.

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Year:  2013        PMID: 23799561     DOI: 10.5603/CJ.a2013.0089

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Cardiol J        ISSN: 1898-018X            Impact factor:   2.737


  2 in total

1.  Whole-exome sequencing reveals microsatellite DNA markers for response to dofetilide initiation in patients with persistent atrial fibrillation: A pilot study.

Authors:  Nick Kinney; Timothy R Larsen; David M Kim; Robin T Varghese; Steven Poelzing; Harold R Garner; Soufian T AlMahameed
Journal:  Clin Cardiol       Date:  2018-06-11       Impact factor: 2.882

2.  An International Observational Prospective Survey Assessing the Control of Atrial Fibrillation in Asia-Pacific: Results of the Record-AFAP Registry.

Authors:  John Amerena; Shih-Ann Chen; Charn Sriratanasathavorn; Jeong-Gwan Cho; Huang Dejia; Razali Omar; Tse Hung Fat; Anthony King
Journal:  Clin Med Insights Cardiol       Date:  2015-07-27
  2 in total

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