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RESEARCH PRODUCT
A new risk score to assess atrial fibrillation risk in hypertensive patients (ESCARVAL-RISK Project.
José M. Lobos-bejaranoVicente Bertomeu-gonzalezJose A. QuesadaLuis Garcia OrtizAngela Lopez-domenechJorge Navarro-pérezDomingo Orozco-beltránAdriana Lopez-pinedaVicente Francisco Gil-guillénAngel Castellanos-rodriguezConcepción Carratalá-munueraAntonio Cardona-llorenssubject
AdultMaleRiskmedicine.medical_specialtyTime FactorsCardiologylcsh:Medicine030204 cardiovascular system & hematologyRisk AssessmentArticleCohort Studies03 medical and health sciencesSex Factors0302 clinical medicineInternal medicineAtrial FibrillationmedicineHumansObesity030212 general & internal medicinelcsh:ScienceAgedHeart FailureMultidisciplinaryFramingham Risk Scorebusiness.industryIncidenceIncidence (epidemiology)lcsh:RHazard ratioAge FactorsAtrial fibrillationMiddle Agedmedicine.diseaseConfidence intervalRisk factorsResearch DesignHypertensionFemalelcsh:QbusinessRisk assessmentBody mass indexFollow-Up StudiesForecastingCohort studydescription
AbstractThis study aimed to assess atrial fibrillation (AF) incidence and predictive factors in hypertensive patients and to formulate an AF risk assessment score that can be used to identify the patients most likely to develop AF. This was a cohort study of patients recruited in primary healthcare centers. Patients aged 40 years or older with hypertension, free of AF and with no previous cardiovascular events were included. Patients attended annual visits according to clinical practice until the end of study or onset of AF. The association between AF incidence and explanatory variables (age, sex, body mass index, medical history and other) was analyzed. Finally, 12,206 patients were included (52.6% men, and mean age was 64.9 years); the mean follow-up was 36.7 months, and 394 (3.2%) patients were diagnosed with AF. The incidence of AF was 10.5/1000 person-years. Age (hazard ratio [HR] 1.06 per year; 95% confidence interval [CI] 1.05–1.08), male sex (HR 1.88; 95% CI 1.53–2.31), obesity (HR 2.57; 95% CI 1.70–3.90), and heart failure (HR 2.44; 95% CI 1.45–4.11) were independent predictors (p < 0.001). We propose a risk score based on significant predictors, which enables the identification of people with hypertension who are at the greatest risk of AF.
year | journal | country | edition | language |
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2020-01-01 |