| Literature DB >> 35919582 |
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.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
Ongoing and completed randomized trials assessing atrial fibrillation screening
| Study | Number randomized | Screening intervention | Population |
|---|---|---|---|
|
| |||
| LOOP[ | 6004 | Implanted monitor | Age ≥70 with risk factors, Denmark |
| REHEARSE-AF[ | 1001 | Hand-held ECG, BID for 1 year | Age 65 + risk factors, UK/Wales |
| SCREEN-AF[ | 822 | 14-day ECG Patch, Twice | Age ≥75 with hypertension, Canada/Germany |
| STROKESTOP[ | 28 768 | Hand-held ECG, BID for 14 days | Age 75 and 76, Sweden |
|
| |||
| Find-AF NCT01855035 | 398 | 10-day Holter, 0, 3, and 6 months | Post-stroke, Germany |
| MonDAFIS NCT02204267 | 3470 | 7-day Holter, once | Post-stroke, Germany |
| mSTOPS NCT02506244 | 2659 | 12-day ECG Patch, twice | Age >75 or <75 with risk factors, USA |
| PerDIEM NCTT02428140 | 300 | Implanted monitor | Post-stroke, Canada |
| VITAL-AF NCT03515057 | 35 308 | Hand-held ECG, once | Age ≥65, USA |
|
| |||
| AMALFI ISRCTN15544176 | 5029 | 14-day ECG patch, once | Age ≥65 with risk factors, UK |
| DANCAVAS ISRCTN12157806 | 79 000 | 3-lead ECG, once | Men, age 60–74, Denmark |
| FIND-AF2 (high risk) NCT04371055 | 1040 | Implanted monitor | Post-stroke, Germany |
| FIND-AF2 (low risk) NCT04371055 | 4160 | 7-day Holter, once | Post-stroke, Germany |
| GUARD-AF NCT04126486 | 11 931 | 14-day ECG Patch, once | Age ≥70, USA |
| Heartline NCT04276441 | 150 000 | ECG Watch | Age ≥65, USA |
| SAFER-Internal Pilot ISRCTN16939438 | 14 082 | Hand-held ECG, QID for 21 days | Age ≥70, UK |
| SAFER-UK ISRCTN72104369 | 100 418 | Hand-held ECG, QID for 21 days | Age ≥70, UK |
| SAFER-AUS ISRCTN72104369 | 2100 | Hand-held ECG, QID for 21 days | Age ≥70, Australia |
| STROKESTOP II NCT02743416 | 28 712 | Hand-held ECG, QID for 14 days | Age 75/76 with elevated NT-ProBNP, Sweden |