Abstract
Abstract Introduction The "Atrial fibrillation Better Care" (ABC) has been proposed as an integrated approach to improve management in patients with atrial fibrillation (AF) based on 3 pillars: "A" Avoid stroke with Anticoagulation; "B" Better symptom optimisation through rate or rhythm control; "C" Cardiovascular risk factor management. There are limited prospective data on the clinical outcomes associated with ABC pathway adherence from Asian countries. Purpose To investigate the beneficial effect of ABC pathway adherence in the prospective multi-country Asia-Pacific Heart Rhythm Society (APHRS) Atrial Fibrillation registry. Method We investigated 4013 AF patients prospectively enrolled in the APHRS registry. Cox-regression analyses were performed to investigate the association between ABC adherence and clinical outcomes. Primary outcome was a composite of all-cause death, any thromboembolic events, acute coronary syndrome or percutaneous interventional procedures and new/worsening heart failure. Secondary outcomes were each component of the composite outcome and major bleeding. Results In the whole population, 1549 (38.6%) patients were ABC adherent (mean age 66±12 years; 33% female). After 1-year of follow-up, ABC pathway adherent patients had a lower incidence of composite outcome (4.0% vs 8.5%, p<0.001), all-cause death (1.4% vs 4.0%, p<0.001), cardiovascular death (0.3% vs 0.9%, p=0.013) and new/worsening heart failure (1.7% vs 2.7%, p=0.010), when compared to those ABC non-adherent. On multivariable Cox regression ABC pathway adherence was associated with a lower risk for composite outcome (Hazard Ratio 0.72, 95% Confidence Interval 0.53-0.97) and the reduction of the risk increased progressively with the number of the ABC criteria fulfilled. There was no statistically significant interaction in the clinical benefit seen between the different participating countries in the APHRS registry (pint=0.217). Conclusion In a large contemporary cohort of Asian AF patients, ABC pathway adherence was associated with a reduction of the risk for the composite outcome of all-cause death and cardiovascular events. This benefit was seen irrespective of enrolling country.
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