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Atrial fibrillation status and associations with adverse clinical outcomes in patients hospitalized with COVID-19: a large unselected statewide population-linkage study.

作者信息

Ne Jia Yi Anna, Chow Clara K, Chow Vincent, Hyun Karice, Kritharides Leonard, Brieger David, Ng Austin Chin Chwan

机构信息

Department of Cardiology, Concord Repatriation General Hospital, Concord, NSW 2139, Australia.

Department of Cardiology, Westmead Applied Research Centre, Westmead Hospital, The University of Sydney, Westmead, NSW 2145, Australia.

出版信息

Eur Heart J Qual Care Clin Outcomes. 2025 May 1;11(3):291-299. doi: 10.1093/ehjqcco/qcae115.

Abstract

BACKGROUND

Atrial fibrillation (AF) is common in COVID-19 patients. The impact of AF on major-adverse-cardiovascular-events (MACE is defined as all-cause mortality, myocardial infarction, ischaemic stroke, cardiac failure, or coronary revascularization), recurrent AF admission, and venous thromboembolism in hospitalized COVID-19 patients is unclear.

METHODS AND RESULTS

Patients admitted with COVID-19 (1 January 2020 to 30 September 2021) were identified from the New South Wales Admitted-Patient-Data-Collection database, stratified by AF status (no-AF vs. prior-AF or new-AF during index COVID-19 admission) and followed-up until 31 March 2022. Multivariable Cox regression and competing risk analyses were performed to assess the impact of AF on MACE and non-fatal outcomes respectively. Our cohort comprised 145 293 COVID-19 patients (median age 67.4 years old; 49.7% males): new-AF, n = 5140 (3.5%); prior-AF, n = 23 204 (16.0%). During a median follow-up of 9 months, prior-AF and new-AF patients had significantly higher MACE events (44.7% vs. 36.2% vs. 18.0%) and all-cause mortality (36.0% vs. 28.7% vs. 15.2%) compared to no-AF patients (both logrank P < 0.001). After adjusting for age, gender, intensive-care-unit admission, referral source, and comorbidities, compared to no-AF, new-AF and prior-AF groups were independently associated with MACE [adjusted hazard ratio (aHR) = 1.15, 95% confidence interval (CI) = 1.09-1.20; aHR = 1.36, 95% CI = 1.33-1.40, respectively]. Competing risk analyses showed rehospitalization rates for ischaemic stroke, cardiac failure, and AF, but not venous thromboembolism, were significantly higher in these patients. Both new-AF and prior-AF patients had higher rehospitalization rates for ischaemic stroke compared to no-AF patients, independent of CHA2DS2VASc.

CONCLUSION

COVID-19 patients with AF are at high risk of adverse clinical outcomes. Such patients may need increased surveillance and consideration for early anticoagulation.

摘要

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