| Literature DB >> 31869370 |
Rui Duarte1, Angela Stainthorpe1,2, James Mahon3, Janette Greenhalgh1, Marty Richardson1, Sarah Nevitt1, Eleanor Kotas1,4, Angela Boland1, Howard Thom5, Tom Marshall6, Mark Hall7, Yemisi Takwoingi6,8.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Atrial fibrillation (AF) is the most common type of cardiac arrhythmia and is associated with increased risk of stroke and congestive heart failure. Lead-I electrocardiogram (ECG) devices are handheld instruments that can detect AF at a single-time point.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31869370 PMCID: PMC6927656 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0226671
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Fig 1PRISMA flow chart.
Characteristics of studies included in the diagnostic test accuracy review.
| Study | Study design; country and setting | Population; number in analysis and recruitment details | Age; sex and risk factors for AF | Lead-I ECG device | Interpreter of lead-I ECG | Test sequence |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Crockford 2013[ | Cross-sectional; UK; secondary care | Patients referred to an electrophysiology department; N = 176; NR | Age; sex and risk factors: NR | RhythmPad GP | Algorithm | 12-lead ECG followed by lead-I ECG |
| Desteghe 2017[ | Case-control; Belgium; tertiary care | Inpatients at cardiology ward; N = 265; NR | Mean age ± SD (years): 67.9 ± 14.6 | MyDiagnostick and Kardia Mobile | Algorithm and two electrophysiologists (results presented separately for algorithm and two electrophysiologists) | 12-lead ECG followed by lead-I ECG (order for the use of the different lead-I ECG tests not specified) |
| Doliwa 2009[ | Case-control; Sweden; secondary care | People with AF, atrial flutter or sinus rhythm; N = 100; patients were recruited from a cardiology outpatient clinic | Age; sex and risk factors: NR | Zenicor-ECG | Cardiologist | 12-lead ECG followed by lead-I ECG |
| Haberman 2015[ | Case-control; USA; community and secondary care | Healthy young adults, elite athletes and cardiology clinic patients; N = 130; NR | Mean age ± SD (years): 59 ± 15 | Kardia Mobile | Electrophysiologist | Lead-I ECG followed by 12-lead ECG |
| Koltowski 2017[ | Cross-sectional; Poland; tertiary care | Patients in a tertiary care centre; N = 100; NR | Age; sex and risk factors: NR | Kardia Mobile | Cardiologist | Lead-I ECG followed by 12-lead ECG |
| Lau 2013[ | Case-control; Australia; secondary care | Patients at cardiology department; N = 204; NR | Age and sex: NR | Kardia Mobile | Algorithm | Lead-I ECG followed by 12-lead ECG |
| Tieleman 2014[ | Case-control; Netherlands; secondary care | Patients with known AF and patients without a history of AF attending an outpatient cardiology clinic or a specialised AF outpatient clinic; N = 192; random selection of patients due to have a 12-lead ECG | Mean age ± SD (years): 69.4 ± 12.6 | MyDiagnostick | Algorithm | Lead-I ECG followed by 12-lead ECG |
| Vaes 2014[ | Case-control; Belgium; primary care | Patients with known AF and patients without a history of AF; N = 181; GP invitation | Mean age ± SD (years): 74.6 ± 9.7 | MyDiagnostick | Algorithm | Lead-I ECG followed by 12-lead ECG |
| Williams 2015[ | Case-control; UK; secondary care | Patients with known AF attending an AF clinic and patients with AF status unknown who were attending the clinic for non-AF related reasons; N = 95; patients attending clinic appointments who were due to have a 12-lead ECG | Age; sex and risk factors: NR | Kardia Mobile | Cardiologist and general practitioner with an interest in cardiology | 12-lead and lead-I ECG carried out simultaneously |
AF = atrial fibrillation; ECG = electrocardiogram; GP = general practice; NR = not reported; SD = standard deviation
*Community population not included in the analysis as these comprised healthy young adults and elite athletes; only secondary care patients were included in the analysis
Fig 2Forest plot of individual studies included in the meta-analysis of all lead-I ECG devices (trace interpreted by a trained healthcare professional).
CI = confidence interval; EP1 = electrophysiologist 1; FN = false negative; FP = false positive; TN = true negative; TP = true positive.
Results from meta-analyses of lead-I ECG devices.
| Data input from the Desteghe | Lead-I ECG device (# studies) in the meta-analyses | # AF cases | N | Pooled sensitivity (95% CI) | Pooled specificity (95% CI) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Kardia Mobile device and EP1 | Kardia Mobile (3), Zenicor-ECG (1) | 118 | 580 | 93.9% (86.2% to 97.4%) | 96.5% (90.4% to 98.8%) |
| MyDiagnostick device and EP1 | Kardia Mobile (2), Zenicor-ECG (1), MyDiagnostick (1) | 118 | 582 | 90.8% (83.8% to 95.0%) | 95.6% (89.4% to 98.3%) |
| MyDiagnostick device and EP2 data | Kardia Mobile (2), Zenicor-ECG (1), MyDiagnostick (1) | 118 | 582 | 89.8% (82.7% to 94.1%) | 96.8% (90.6% to 99.0%) |
| Kardia Mobile device and EP2 | Kardia Mobile (3), Zenicor-ECG (1) | 120 | 584 | 91.8% (85.1% to 95.7%) | 97.1% (90.8% to 99.1%) |
| Kardia Mobile device and EP1 | Kardia Mobile (3), Zenicor-ECG (1) | 118 | 580 | 94.3% (87.9% to 97.4%) | 96.0% (85.4% to 99.0%) |
| Kardia Mobile device and EP1 | Kardia Mobile (3) | 67 | 480 | 94.0% (85.1% to 97.7%) | 96.8% (88.0% to 99.2%) |
| Kardia Mobile device and EP2 | Kardia Mobile (3) | 69 | 484 | 91.3% (82.0% to 96.0%) | 97.4% (88.3% to 99.5%) |
| MyDiagnostick device | Kardia Mobile (1), MyDiagnostick (3) | 219 | 842 | 96.2% (86.0% to 99.0%) | 95.2% (92.9% to 96.8%) |
| Kardia Mobile device | Kardia Mobile (2), MyDiagnostick (2) | 219 | 842 | 95.3% (70.4% to 99.4%) | 96.2% (94.2% to 97.6%) |
| MyDiagnostick device only | MyDiagnostick (3) | 171 | 638 | 95.2% (79.0% to 99.1%) | 94.4% (91.9% to 96.2%) |
| Kardia Mobile device only | Kardia Mobile (2) | 70 | 469 | 88.0% (32.3% to 99.1%) | 97.2% (95.1% to 98.5%) |
# = number of; AF = atrial fibrillation; CI = confidence interval; EP1 = electrophysiologist 1; EP2 = electrophysiologist 2; GP = general practitioner
*From the Desteghe study27
**From the Williams study35
Base Case 1: Pairwise cost effectiveness analysis.
| Strategy | Costs | QALYs | Incremental costs | Incremental QALYs | ICER/ QALY gained |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Standard pathway | £514,187 | 447.963 | |||
| Kardia Mobile | £515,551 | 449.249 | £1,364 | 1.286 | £1,060 |
| imPulse | £530,745 | 448.987 | £16,557 | 1.024 | £16,165 |
| MyDiagnostick | £521,233 | 449.024 | £7,046 | 1.061 | £6,638 |
| Generic lead-I device | £516,730 | 449.246 | £2,543 | 1.284 | £1,981 |
| Zenicor-ECG | £518,468 | 449.199 | £4,281 | 1.236 | £3,462 |
| RhythmPad GP | £518,436 | 448.573 | £4,249 | 0.610 | £6,962 |
ICER = incremental cost effectiveness ratio; QALY = quality adjusted life year
*Algorithm interpretation
Base Case 1: Incremental cost effectiveness analysis.
| Strategy | Costs | QALYs | Incremental costs | Incremental QALYs | ICER/ QALY gained |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Standard pathway | £514,187 | 447.963 | |||
| Kardia Mobile | £515,551 | 449.249 | £1,364 | 1.286 | £1,060 |
| Generic lead-I device | £516,730 | 449.246 | £1,179 | -0.002 | Dominated |
| RhythmPad GP | £518,436 | 448.573 | £2,885 | -0.676 | Dominated |
| Zenicor-ECG | £518,468 | 449.199 | £2,917 | -0.050 | Dominated |
| MyDiagnostick | £521,233 | 449.024 | £5,682 | -0.225 | Dominated |
| imPulse | £530,745 | 448.987 | £15,194 | -0.262 | Dominated |
ICER = incremental cost effectiveness ratio; QALY = quality adjusted life year
*Algorithm interpretation