Abstract
Abstract Background In the treatment of patients with symptomatic atrial fibrillation (AF) reducing AF-related symptoms and improving health-related quality of life (HRQol) are important drivers in the decision for pulmonary vein isolation (PVI). Eventhought the majority of PVI patients has improved HRQoL after PVI, up to a third of patients do not. We aim to assess the association between various patient characteristics, intervention and outcome variables and HRQol both prior to and one-year after PVI with specific attention for those groups that did not improve or were still impaired in HRQoL after PVI. Methods In this observational, retrospective multicenter cohort study, we used data from 8 hospitals participating within the Netherlands Heart Registration (NHR), a non-profit organisation facilitating high-quality registration of patients undergoing cardiac interventions within the Netherlands. Patients who underwent PVI between January 2016 and December 2019 and completed the Atrial Fibrillation Effect on Quality-of-Life (AFEQT) questionnaire both prior to and one-year after were included (N=2534). To interpret the relevance of findings, accepted cut-off values for the AFEQT Overall summary score were used; <80 points for impaired HRQoL and a delta of ≥5 points for clinically meaningful improvement. Results The majority of the population were men (65.7%) with normal left ventricular ejection fraction (87.1%), paroxysmal AF (77.1%) and a low median CHA₂DS₂-VASc score of 1 (interquartile range, 1–2). The mean AFEQT score was 55.6 ± 19.7 prior to intervention and 79.8 ± 20.2 one-year after PVI. Despite this major increase in mean AFEQT score, we found 39.5% of the population still impaired in HRQol (<80 points) one-year after PVI and 19.2% of the population failed to achieve a clinically meaningful improvement (delta of ≥5 points). Lower baseline AFEQT score (odds ratio [OR], 0.96 [per 1-point increase]; 95% CI, 0.96-0.97; P<0.001) and female sex (odds ratio [OR], 1.42; 95% CI, 1.16-1.75; P<0.001) found to be the most prominent related factors with impaired HRQol one-year after PVI. For failure to achieve clinically meaningful improvement higher baseline AFEQT score (odds ratio [OR], 1.04 [per 1-point increase]; 95% CI, 1.04-1.05; P<0.001) was strongly associated. Other independent risk factors were age (impaired HRQol); BMI (impaired HRQOL); CHA₂DS₂-VASc score (failure to achieve clinically meaningful improvement) and prior catheter ablation for AF (impaired HRQOL and failure to achieve clinically meaningful improvement). Conclusion Despite a major increase in HRQol across the population after PVI, over one third of patients were still impaired in HRQoL after PVI. Several factors were identified which could guide patient counseling for the best fitting treatment for atrial fibrillation.
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