| Literature DB >> 32477759 |
Abstract
Silent atrial fibrillation (AF) is common. In some patients, it is the only manifestation of AF, while in others, the AF may be symptomatic or both symptomatic and asymptomatic. Regardless, however, to date, the significance, detection, and management considerations for silent AF have been incompletely elucidated. This current study aimed to review, for both the current clinician and investigator, considerations and attitudes and the ongoing studies, respectively, with respect to silent AF. The methods used were a literature review and personal trial and clinical experience; the frequency of silent AF, concerns regarding silent AF, methods to detect silent AF, and prospective trials focused on the detection and management of silent AF were considered. The results of the literature search indicated that recently conducted relevant trials, such as PREDATE AF, ASSERT-II, and REVEAL AF, have shown that silent AF is frequent in patients with risk markers for AF and stroke in whom no prior AF history is present, and in whom no pacemaker or implantable cardioverter-defibrillator implantations have been previously performed. Furthermore, the GLORIA-AF Registry has reported the observance of more permanent AF and more prior strokes in asymptomatic patients. Ongoing trials such as ARTESiA and NOAH-AFNET 6 are expected to clarify the benefits and risks of oral anticoagulation in patients with silent AF. At present, when silent AF is detected in patients with stroke risk markers, most practitioners initiate an anticoagulation regimen. Copyright:Entities:
Keywords: Atrial fibrillation; implantable cardiac monitor; silent atrial fibrillation; subclinical atrial fibrillation; undetected atrial fibrillation
Year: 2017 PMID: 32477759 PMCID: PMC7252797 DOI: 10.19102/icrm.2017.081102
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Innov Card Rhythm Manag ISSN: 2156-3977
A Synopsis of PREDATE-AF, ASSERT-II, and REVEAL AF
| Trial | Number of Subjects Enrolled | Mean Subject Age | % Female | Primary Endpoint | Event Rate | Average Detection Time |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| PREDATE-AF[ | 245 | 74.3 years | 41% | AF lasting six minutes or more | 22.4% at 451 days | 141.3 days |
| ASSERT-II[ | 273 | 73.9 years | 34% | AF lasting five minutes or more | 34.4%/person-year | 5.1 months |
| REVEAL AF[ | 385 | 71.6 years | 48% | AF lasting six minutes or more | 29.3% at 18 months | 123 days |
AF: atrial fibrillation.