Literature DB >> 35919582

Screening for atrial fibrillation to prevent stroke: a meta-analysis.

William F McIntyre1, Søren Z Diederichsen2, Ben Freedman3, Renate B Schnabel4, Emma Svennberg5, Jeff S Healey1.   

Abstract

Aims: We aimed to summarize existing evidence from published randomized trials that assessed atrial fibrillation (AF) screening for stroke prevention. Methods and results: We searched MEDLINE for randomized trials that enrolled patients without known AF, screened for AF using electrocardiogram-based methods, and reported stroke outcomes. For this analysis, we excluded studies that focused on post-stroke populations. We combined data using a random-effects model and performed trial sequential meta-analysis using an O'Brien-Fleming alpha-spending function.We identified four randomized clinical trials with a total of 35 836 participants. The populations, screening intervention, and definition of stroke varied markedly. As compared with no screening, AF screening was associated with a reduction in stroke (relative risk 0.91; 95% confidence interval: 0.84-0.99]. Trial sequential meta-analysis found that the cumulative z-score did not cross the stopping boundary.After polling members of the AF-SCREEN and AFFECT-EU consortia, we identified a further 12 trials that are complete but have not yet reported stroke outcomes or are ongoing and expected to collect stroke outcomes. These consortia are planning an individual participant data meta-analysis which will permit the exploration of methodological heterogeneity. Conclusions: If and how to screen for AF is an important public health concern. The body of evidence published to date suggests that AF could be effective to prevent strokes in some settings. The AF-SCREEN/AFFECT-EU individual patient data meta-analysis aims to comprehensively assess the benefits and risks of AF screening, and determine how population, screening method, and health-system factors influence stroke prevention.
© The Author(s) 2022. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the European Society of Cardiology.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Atrial fibrillation; Meta-analysis; Screening; Stroke

Year:  2022        PMID: 35919582      PMCID: PMC9305505          DOI: 10.1093/ehjopen/oeac044

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Eur Heart J Open        ISSN: 2752-4191


Atrial fibrillation (AF) is a major cause of disabling stroke worldwide. Once AF is identified, stroke risk can be substantially reduced with oral anticoagulation (OAC). Many medical and consumer-facing technologies can now detect AF, and there is widespread interest in screening for AF, as a means of preventing stroke.[1] However, advisory panels, like the United States Preventative Services Task Force, have concluded that there is currently insufficient evidence to endorse AF screening.[2] We undertook a focused review to summarize existing evidence from published randomized controlled trials (RCTs) that assessed AF screening for stroke prevention. We searched MEDLINE for randomized trials that enrolled patients without known AF, screened for AF using electrocardiogram (ECG)-based methods, and reported stroke outcomes. We excluded studies that focused on post-stroke populations. We identified four randomized clinical trials with a total of 35 836 participants ( and ).[3-6]’s lower panel shows the results of a random-effects meta-analysis of stroke outcomes, following the intention-to-treat principle. While the point estimate [relative risk 0.91; 95% confidence interval (CI): 0.84–0.99] is modestly in favour of AF screening, published trials are heterogenous in their populations, their definition of stroke ( footnote), and their screening methodology (from single time-point ECG to years of invasive monitoring). Study selection diagram. Forest plot (upper panel) and trial sequential analysis (lower panel) of published RCTs of AF screening for stroke prevention. Stroke was defined in REHEARSE-AF as stroke, transient ischaemic attack, or systemic embolism; stroke was defined in SCREEN-AF as ischaemic stroke; stroke was defined in LOOP as stroke or systemic embolism; stroke was defined in STROKESTOP as ischaemic stroke or systemic embolism. *REHEARSE-AF was not penalized at interim look due to low information use (<1%). Ongoing and completed randomized trials assessing atrial fibrillation screening ’s upper panel shows a trial sequential analysis of reported studies. The boundary in red is calculated using the observed event rates of studies to date, a two-sided Type-1 error of 5%, 80% power, 50% heterogeneity, and an O’Brien-Fleming alpha-spending function. The trial sequential analysis shows that the cumulative z-score from published data (blue line) is insufficient to conclude the benefits of screening and calculates an optimal sample size of a total of 103 454 participants randomized, indicating that further trials should be performed. Atrial fibrillation screening can only prevent strokes in patients who are found to have the disease, and then take OAC as a result of positive screening. Furthermore, AF is only one of many important risk factors for stroke. This means that the relative risk reduction for screening could be small and large numbers of patients need to be studied to demonstrate the efficacy of AF screening for stroke prevention. Still, the number of patients worldwide who are at risk of AF-related stroke is very large, and the absolute benefit of AF screening could be large. Given this potential public health impact of AF screening on stroke, there is a need to systematically collate data on RCTs of AF screening in a variety of healthcare settings. The International AF-SCREEN collaboration has been working since 2015 to assess the efficacy of AF screening for the prevention of stroke.[1] Members of the group secured a European Union Horizons 2020 grant (Digital, risk-based screening for atrial fibrillation in the European community, agreement No 847770), which supports a prospective, individual patient data meta-analysis of RCTs (PROSPERO, Protocol Under Review).[7] The primary outcome of the meta-analysis is stroke. Secondary outcomes include AF detection, OAC prescription, hospitalization, mortality, and bleeding. Anonymized participant data from individual RCTs are being translated into a common format and collated in a central database. Individual participant data will permit pre-specified subgroup and meta-regression analyses to explore heterogeneity in populations, healthcare settings, screening modalities, and uptake of OAC. To date, study teams from 16 RCTs including nearly 300 000 participants are contributing to the effort; any group conducting an eligible trial is invited to join ().

Conclusion

If and how to screen for AF is an important public health concern. The AF-SCREEN/AFFECT-EU individual patient data meta-analysis aims to comprehensively assess the benefits and risks of AF screening, and determine how population, screening method, and health-system factors influence stroke prevention.
Table 1

Ongoing and completed randomized trials assessing atrial fibrillation screening

StudyNumber randomizedScreening interventionPopulation
Studies cited in the current report
LOOP[3]6004Implanted monitorAge ≥70 with risk factors, Denmark
REHEARSE-AF[4]1001Hand-held ECG, BID for 1 yearAge 65 + risk factors, UK/Wales
SCREEN-AF[5]82214-day ECG Patch, TwiceAge ≥75 with hypertension, Canada/Germany
STROKESTOP[6]28 768Hand-held ECG, BID for 14 daysAge 75 and 76, Sweden
Completed trials without published stroke outcomes and/or conducted in post-stroke population
Find-AF NCT0185503539810-day Holter, 0, 3, and 6 monthsPost-stroke, Germany
MonDAFIS NCT0220426734707-day Holter, oncePost-stroke, Germany
mSTOPS NCT02506244265912-day ECG Patch, twiceAge >75 or <75 with risk factors, USA
PerDIEM NCTT02428140300Implanted monitorPost-stroke, Canada
VITAL-AF NCT0351505735 308Hand-held ECG, onceAge ≥65, USA
Ongoing trials
AMALFI ISRCTN15544176502914-day ECG patch, onceAge ≥65 with risk factors, UK
DANCAVAS ISRCTN1215780679 0003-lead ECG, onceMen, age 60–74, Denmark
FIND-AF2 (high risk) NCT043710551040Implanted monitorPost-stroke, Germany
FIND-AF2 (low risk) NCT0437105541607-day Holter, oncePost-stroke, Germany
GUARD-AF NCT0412648611 93114-day ECG Patch, onceAge ≥70, USA
Heartline NCT04276441150 000ECG WatchAge ≥65, USA
SAFER-Internal Pilot ISRCTN1693943814 082Hand-held ECG, QID for 21 daysAge ≥70, UK
SAFER-UK ISRCTN72104369100 418Hand-held ECG, QID for 21 daysAge ≥70, UK
SAFER-AUS ISRCTN721043692100Hand-held ECG, QID for 21 daysAge ≥70, Australia
STROKESTOP II NCT0274341628 712Hand-held ECG, QID for 14 daysAge 75/76 with elevated NT-ProBNP, Sweden
  7 in total

1.  Digital, risk-based screening for atrial fibrillation in the European community-the AFFECT-EU project funded by the European Union.

Authors:  Daniel Engler; Hein Heidbuchel; Renate B Schnabel
Journal:  Eur Heart J       Date:  2021-07-15       Impact factor: 29.983

Review 2.  Screening for Atrial Fibrillation: A Report of the AF-SCREEN International Collaboration.

Authors:  Ben Freedman; John Camm; Hugh Calkins; Jeffrey S Healey; Mårten Rosenqvist; Jiguang Wang; Christine M Albert; Craig S Anderson; Sotiris Antoniou; Emelia J Benjamin; Giuseppe Boriani; Johannes Brachmann; Axel Brandes; Tze-Fan Chao; David Conen; Johan Engdahl; Laurent Fauchier; David A Fitzmaurice; Leif Friberg; Bernard J Gersh; David J Gladstone; Taya V Glotzer; Kylie Gwynne; Graeme J Hankey; Joseph Harbison; Graham S Hillis; Mellanie T Hills; Hooman Kamel; Paulus Kirchhof; Peter R Kowey; Derk Krieger; Vivian W Y Lee; Lars-Åke Levin; Gregory Y H Lip; Trudie Lobban; Nicole Lowres; Georges H Mairesse; Carlos Martinez; Lis Neubeck; Jessica Orchard; Jonathan P Piccini; Katrina Poppe; Tatjana S Potpara; Helmut Puererfellner; Michiel Rienstra; Roopinder K Sandhu; Renate B Schnabel; Chung-Wah Siu; Steven Steinhubl; Jesper H Svendsen; Emma Svennberg; Sakis Themistoclakis; Robert G Tieleman; Mintu P Turakhia; Arnljot Tveit; Steven B Uittenbogaart; Isabelle C Van Gelder; Atul Verma; Rolf Wachter; Bryan P Yan
Journal:  Circulation       Date:  2017-05-09       Impact factor: 29.690

3.  Implantable loop recorder detection of atrial fibrillation to prevent stroke (The LOOP Study): a randomised controlled trial.

Authors:  Jesper H Svendsen; Søren Z Diederichsen; Søren Højberg; Derk W Krieger; Claus Graff; Christian Kronborg; Morten S Olesen; Jonas B Nielsen; Anders G Holst; Axel Brandes; Ketil J Haugan; Lars Køber
Journal:  Lancet       Date:  2021-08-29       Impact factor: 79.321

4.  Clinical outcomes in systematic screening for atrial fibrillation (STROKESTOP): a multicentre, parallel group, unmasked, randomised controlled trial.

Authors:  Emma Svennberg; Leif Friberg; Viveka Frykman; Faris Al-Khalili; Johan Engdahl; Mårten Rosenqvist
Journal:  Lancet       Date:  2021-08-29       Impact factor: 79.321

5.  Screening for Atrial Fibrillation: US Preventive Services Task Force Recommendation Statement.

Authors:  Karina W Davidson; Michael J Barry; Carol M Mangione; Michael Cabana; Aaron B Caughey; Esa M Davis; Katrina E Donahue; Chyke A Doubeni; John W Epling; Martha Kubik; Li Li; Gbenga Ogedegbe; Lori Pbert; Michael Silverstein; James Stevermer; Chien-Wen Tseng; John B Wong
Journal:  JAMA       Date:  2022-01-25       Impact factor: 157.335

6.  Assessment of Remote Heart Rhythm Sampling Using the AliveCor Heart Monitor to Screen for Atrial Fibrillation: The REHEARSE-AF Study.

Authors:  Julian P J Halcox; Kathie Wareham; Antonia Cardew; Mark Gilmore; James P Barry; Ceri Phillips; Michael B Gravenor
Journal:  Circulation       Date:  2017-08-28       Impact factor: 29.690

7.  Screening for Atrial Fibrillation in the Older Population: A Randomized Clinical Trial.

Authors:  David J Gladstone; Rolf Wachter; Katharina Schmalstieg-Bahr; F Russell Quinn; Eva Hummers; Noah Ivers; Tamara Marsden; Andrea Thornton; Angie Djuric; Johanna Suerbaum; Doris von Grünhagen; William F McIntyre; Alexander P Benz; Jorge A Wong; Fatima Merali; Sam Henein; Chris Nichol; Stuart J Connolly; Jeff S Healey
Journal:  JAMA Cardiol       Date:  2021-05-01       Impact factor: 14.676

  7 in total

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