CARDIOPATIA
ISCHEMICA
Anticoagulation therapy in atrial fibrillation
in combination
with acute myocardial infarction influences long-term outcome: a
prospective
cohort study from the Register of Information and Knowledge About
Swedish
Heart Intensive Care Admissions (RIKS-HIA).
Stenestrand U,
Lindback J,
Wallentin L;
RIKS-HIA
Registry.
Department of Cardiology, University Hospital of Linkoping, Sweden.
stenestrand@riks-hia.se
BACKGROUND:
The American and European guidelines do not agree with regard to
antithrombotic
treatment in patients with atrial fibrillation (AF) and acute
myocardial
infarction (AMI), thus causing uncertainty among physicians. We
investigated
the prescription of oral anticoagulation (OAC) in patients discharged
alive
with AF after an AMI and the influence of OAC treatment on 1-year
mortality.
METHODS AND RESULTS: This was a prospective cohort study using data
from
the Register of Information and Knowledge about Swedish Heart Intensive
care
Admissions (RIKS-HIA) on patients admitted to the coronary care units
of
72 Swedish hospitals from 1995 to 2002. A total of 6182 patients
discharged
alive with first registry-recorded AMI and AF on discharge ECG were
included.
One-year mortality data were obtained from the Swedish National Cause
of
Death Register. Only 30% (n=1848) of the 6182 patients with AF were
prescribed
OAC. At 1 year, the unadjusted mortality was 31% (1183 deaths) in the
platelet-inhibitors
only group and 22% (414 deaths) in the OAC-treated group. In Cox
regression
analysis with adjustment for confounding factors, OAC treatment was
associated
with a reduction in 1-year mortality (relative risk 0.73; 95% CI 0.62
to
0.86; P<0.001) in hospital survivors of AMI with AF. The reduction
in
mortality appeared to be caused primarily by a lower rate of ischemic
heart
death (55.6% versus 62.0%) and fatal stroke (5.7% versus 7.5%) in the
OAC
group. This reduction of mortality was similar among most subgroups
based
on age, sex, baseline characteristics, previous disease manifestations,
and
medications. CONCLUSIONS: In daily clinical practice, OAC was only
given
to a minority (30%) of AMI patients with AF, despite the fact that OAC
was
associated with a 29% relative and 7% absolute reduction in 1-year
mortality
after adjustment for confounding variables. The results emphasize the
importance
of OAC treatment for AF after AMI.
Aprile 2005