| Literature DB >> 34211827 |
Ben Freedman1, Gerhard Hindricks2, Amitava Banerjee3, Adrian Baranchuk4, Chi Keong Ching5, Xin Du6, Donna Fitzsimons7, Jeff S Healey8, Takanori Ikeda9, Trudie C A Lobban10, Amam Mbakwem11, Calambur Narasimhan12, Lis Neubeck13, Peter Noseworthy14, Daniel M Philbin15, Fausto J Pinto16, Joselyn Rwebembera17, Renate B Schnabel18, Jesper Hastrup Svendsen19, Luis Aguinaga20, Elena Arbelo21, Michael Böhm22, Hasan Ali Farhan23, F D Richard Hobbs24, Antoni Martínez-Rubio25, Claudio Militello26, Nitish Naik27, Jean Jacques Noubiap28, Pablo Perel29, Daniel José Piñeiro30, Antonio Luiz Ribeiro31, Janina Stepinska32.
Abstract
The World Heart Federation (WHF) commenced a Roadmap initiative in 2015 to reduce the global burden of cardiovascular disease and resultant burgeoning of healthcare costs. Roadmaps provide a blueprint for implementation of priority solutions for the principal cardiovascular diseases leading to death and disability. Atrial fibrillation (AF) is one of these conditions and is an increasing problem due to ageing of the world's population and an increase in cardiovascular risk factors that predispose to AF. The goal of the AF roadmap was to provide guidance on priority interventions that are feasible in multiple countries, and to identify roadblocks and potential strategies to overcome them. Since publication of the AF Roadmap in 2017, there have been many technological advances including devices and artificial intelligence for identification and prediction of unknown AF, better methods to achieve rhythm control, and widespread uptake of smartphones and apps that could facilitate new approaches to healthcare delivery and increasing community AF awareness. In addition, the World Health Organisation added the non-vitamin K antagonist oral anticoagulants (NOACs) to the Essential Medicines List, making it possible to increase advocacy for their widespread adoption as therapy to prevent stroke. These advances motivated the WHF to commission a 2020 AF Roadmap update. Three years after the original Roadmap publication, the identified barriers and solutions were judged still relevant, and progress has been slow. This 2020 Roadmap update reviews the significant changes since 2017 and identifies priority areas for achieving the goals of reducing death and disability related to AF, particularly targeted at low-middle income countries. These include advocacy to increase appreciation of the scope of the problem; plugging gaps in guideline management and prevention through physician education, increasing patient health literacy, and novel ways to increase access to integrated healthcare including mHealth and digital transformations; and greater emphasis on achieving practical solutions to national and regional entrenched barriers. Despite the advances reviewed in this update, the task will not be easy, but the health rewards of implementing solutions that are both innovative and practical will be great. Copyright:Entities:
Keywords: AF; NOACs; WHF; atrial fibrillation; cardiology; digital technology
Year: 2021 PMID: 34211827 PMCID: PMC8162289 DOI: 10.5334/gh.1023
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Glob Heart ISSN: 2211-8160
Temporal trends in country burden of AF detected by AF screening.
| Country | Prevalence | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2001–2010 publications* | 2011–2020 publications* | |||
| Cohort | Burden | Cohort | Burden | |
| Belgium [ | ≥40 years | 2.2% | ||
| China [ | General population | 0.65% (0.66% men, 0.63% women) | General population | 1.14% unadjusted. |
| England [ | ≥65 years | 8.9% (7.9% to 9.7%) control; | ≥45 years | 2.0% over all |
| Germany [ | 2.5% age weighted. | |||
| Hong Kong [ | General population | 1.8% overall. | ||
| India [ | General population | 0.1–0.5% | General population | 1.6% |
| Italy [ | ≥65 years | 7.4% | ≥65 years | 7.3% overall |
| Netherlands [ | ≥55 years | 5.5% overall | ||
| Portugal [ | ≥40 years | 2.5% over all | ≥65 years | 9% overall |
| Spain [ | 25–74 years | 0.7% | ≥40 years | 4.4% (3.8–5.1 95% CI) |
| Sweden [ | General population | 2.5% overall | 75/76-year-old | 14.3%. |
| Ghana [ | Rural | ≥50 years | 0.3% overall | |
| Tanzania [ | Rural | ≥70 years | 0.67% overall | |
| Ethiopia [ | Urban | ≥40 years | 4.3% overall | |
Legend: * Publication date may be somewhat later than date of cohort data collection.
Main risk factors for incident AF.
| Age, male sex, Caucasian ethnicity, lower socioeconomic status and social deprivation, family history of AF | |
| Smoking/tobacco use, alcohol intake, sedentary lifestyle, or vigorous exercise | |
| Heart failure, coronary artery disease, vascular disease, rheumatic heart disease and valvular disease, congenital heart disease, heart rhythm disorders | |
| Hypertension, dyslipidemia, diabetes mellitus, renal dysfunction, obesity, sleep-disordered breathing, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, inflammatory diseases, surgery | |
Figure 1Ideal AF pathway © World Heart Federation.
Roadblocks, strategies, and potential solutions.
| Dimension | Roadblock | Strategy | Potential solutions |
|---|---|---|---|
| Long distances to clinics result in low numbers of rural patients presenting to clinics for screening and follow-up appointments. | Improve accessibility of screening for rural populations. Strengthen capacity for ECG testing in remote areas. Promote the use of digital technology to improve screening and diagnosis of AF. | Train community health workers or pharmacists to screen for possible AF with pulse-checking in non-clinic settings. Educate in schools about checking pulse and relationship of AF with stroke. Educate at-risk populations (e.g., those 65+ years of age) to self-screen with pulse checks. Implement novel telemedicine technologies (e.g., transmission of ECG results from rural areas to urban facilities) including handheld digital rhythm strips (accepted by ESC for AF diagnosis). Use digital technology or ‘wearables’ to conduct non-invasive screening (e.g., PPG readings generated from smartphones, though ECG still required for diagnosis). Use digital technology for remote patient follow up (e.g., phone or video calls). | |
| Shortage of health care professionals with training in AF, including interpretation of ECG, initiation of and monitoring of anticoagulation therapy. | Raise awareness of AF among health care professionals. Reduce dependence on highly trained medical staff for AF screening and management. Implement coherent rhythm control strategies. Better integration with other cardiology and medical services. | Conduct awareness campaigns through healthcare professional networks. Improve postgraduate training and CME. Develop simple and locally applicable AF guidelines. Implement non-physician healthcare workers (NPHW)-managed anticoagulation program. Increase governmental funding. Progress towards Universal Health Coverage (UHC). Train human resources. Set up AF research and registries in LMICs to ascertain the disease patterns specific to these countries. Involve allied health professionals for monitoring and follow-up purposes. Rely on electronic solutions (e.g., smartphones and apps) to provide patients with regular guidance. Promote awareness of AF management in related medical services (hypertension, heart failure, coronary artery disease, medical). Treat and prevent contributory factors (e.g., hypertension, heart failure, coronary artery disease). | |
| OACs potentially unaffordable for patient households, resulting in nonadherence to treatment regime. Pharmaceutical poverty. | Improve affordability of OACs and other essential medicines so that every patient can access them. Design novel treatment environments such as office-based labs. | Provide universal health care coverage for essential medicines, or provide similar support via a not-for-profit organisation). Implement internationally recognized policies for the reduction of essential medicine costs. Ensure that national essential medicines lists include NOACs. Promote the availability of NOACs as generics. Office-based labs provide safe and affordable spaces for interventions in AF patients. | |
| Reluctance of physicians and patients to initiate anticoagulation therapy. | Improve awareness of and capacity for managing OAC. therapy among physicians. Improve patient understanding of importance of OAC therapy and capacity to adhere to therapy. | Conduct country-specific training on OAC therapy management and support programmes for non-cardiologist health care professionals with the support of professional patient organisations when available. Develop and implement country-specific patient education, health literacy, and support programmes for diagnosed AF patients on OAC therapy and foster the dissemination of existing resources across countries. Support the development of structured patient organisations. Foster patient-centred approaches to support medication adherence and effective lifestyle risk reduction. Foster patient self-management and adherence to medication through digital technology and connected devices. Conduct research into feasibility of self-monitoring programmes for patients on OAC therapy in LMICs. | |
| Unavailability of standards or norms to ascertain the quality of certain new devices, services, and treatments. | Implement robust mechanisms for the accreditation/certification of new devices, services, and treatments. | Create a list of certified devices, apps, etc. Ensure that technology is supported by a clear pathway to treatment. Foster implementation research. Promote the use of a standard set of patient-reported outcomes among health practitioners (195). Use a common definition of quality indicators and markers. | |
Figure 2Recording of ECG rhythm strip by a woman instructed by a village health worker using a mobile hand-held smartphone ECG device. Reprinted from International Journal of Cardiology, 280, Soni A, Karna S, Fahey N, Sanghai S, Patel H, Raithatha S, et al., Age-and-sex Stratified Prevalence of Atrial Fibrillation in Rural Western India: Results of SMARTIndia, a population-based screening study, pp. 84–88, 2019, with permission from Elsevier.
Figure 3Proposed hub-and-spoke model of oral anticoagulant therapy in patients with atrial fibrillation in low- and middle-income countries. Specialist doctor at hub – If no specialist is available, the hub may be a GP. GP – general practitioner, HW – health worker at spoke. P – the depicted Patient (P) here has point-of-care INR monitoring facility and dosage adjustment and data sharing app.
Educational items for anticoagulant medication adherence to be delivered by physicians or other health professionals to patients with atrial fibrillation.
A non-vitamin K antagonist anticoagulant (NOAC) thins the blood and reduces the risk of getting dangerous blood clots, in the same way as vitamin K antagonists (VKA, e.g., warfarin). Not taking the drug means no protection! Take your drug exactly as prescribed (once or twice daily for NOAC, once a day with the correct dose for VKA). Do not skip a prescribed dose to ensure optimal protection from blood clots and stroke! Do not stop your medication without consulting your physician. |
| For NOACs, you may need occasional creatinine blood tests to check kidney function |
| For VKA, ensure a stable diet of vitamin K containing foods, and have your INR checked regularly to make sure you have optimal anticoagulation protection against clots without increasing bleeding risk. |
After a trauma or bleeding event, consult with your physician regarding further management Do not add any other medication without consulting your physician, not even short-term painkillers that you can get without a prescription. You may need INR testing after starting any new medication if you are taking VKA Alert your dentist, surgeon, or another physician before an intervention. |
| Bleeding is the most common side effect of an anticoagulant. However, the reduction in the risk for stroke outweighs the bleeding risk. Contact your healthcare provider if you have any signs or symptoms of bleeding such as: |
Unusual bruising, nosebleeds, bleeding of gums, bleeding from cuts that take a long time to stop Menstrual flow or vaginal bleeding that is heavier than normal Blood in urine, red or black stools Coughing up blood or vomiting blood Dizziness, paleness, or weakness |
| You should still take that dose unless the time until your next dose is less than the time after your missed dose. |
Twice daily NOAC: you can opt to forgo the next planned dose and restart after 24 h. Once daily NOAC: you can continue the normal regimen without skipping a dose. |
| Continue your normal dosing if you missed a dose. Omit one dose and have an INR check if you took a double dose |
* This table is adapted from the 2018 European Heart Rhythm Association Practical Guide on the use of non-vitamin K antagonist oral anticoagulants in patients with atrial fibrillation [264].
Figure 4Key educational points to convey to the patients with atrial fibrillation at each visit by physicians. © World Heart Federation. Adapted based on the 2018 European Heart Rhythm Association Practical Guide recommendations [264].