Conference Coverage

New ESC/EACTS guideline on atrial fibrillation


 

Rate and rhythm control

The guidelines make no recommendation of one novel oral anticoagulant (NOAC) over another. However, in patients already receiving vitamin K antagonists with low time in the therapeutic range, they recommend switching to a different NOAC but ensuring good adherence and persistence with therapy (class I recommendation) or efforts to improve time in therapeutic range (class IIa).

task force member Carina Blomström-Lundqvist, MD, PhD, Uppsala University, Sweden

Dr. Carina Blomström-Lundqvist

Catheter ablation takes on a more prominent role for rhythm control and is now recommended after one antiarrhythmic drug therapy fails to improve symptoms of AF recurrence in patients with paroxysmal AFib, or persistent AFib with or without major risk factors for recurrence. The class I recommendation is based on results from the CAPTAF and CABANA trials, said task force member Carina Blomström-Lundqvist, MD, PhD, Uppsala University, Sweden.

Catheter ablation is also now a first-line therapy for patients with AFib who have a high likelihood of tachycardia-induced cardiomyopathy, independent of symptom status. “In this subset of patients, catheter ablation may offer a lot with respect to restoration of left ventricular function,” observed Dr. Hindricks.

Complete electrical isolation of the pulmonary veins is recommended during all AFib catheter ablation procedures (class I).

“Even as a medical conservative, I think it is totally reasonable to move to catheter ablation after a failed drug trial,” commented John Mandrola, MD, Baptist Health, Louisville, Ky., who was not a part of the guideline development.

Although the chance of a second drug working after one failure is low, he noted that operators in the United States have dofetilide, which is not used much in Europe, and sometimes works surprisingly well.

“That said, the caveat is that moving to catheter ablation after drug failure is only appropriate if we have addressed all the pertinent risk factors: sleep apnea, weight loss, lack of fitness, blood pressure control, and alcohol excess,” he said.

As for tachycardia-mediated cardiomyopathy, this too can be reasonable, Dr. Mandrola said. “I often get people ‘out of a hole’ with amiodarone plus cardioversion for a few months and then proceed to ablation.”

Notably, the 2020 iteration sharpens its recommendation that amiodarone not be used first-line for long-term rhythm control in all patients with AFib, including those with heart failure with reduced ejection fraction, given its extracardiac toxicity (class I, up from IIa).

Quality counts

In response to growing evidence that guideline-adherence is associated with significantly better outcomes in AFib, the 2020 ESC/EACTS guidelines explicitly included a recommendation on the need to measure quality of care to identify opportunities for improvement.

With this framework in mind, a task force with 23 people – including members from ESC and heart rhythm societies in the United States, Asia Pacific, and Latin America, along with patient representatives – was created to develop a list of quality indicators (QIs), ultimately settling on 17 main QIs and 17 secondary ones, said Elena Arbelo, MD, PhD, MSc, University of Barcelona.

The QIs are classified into six domains: patient assessment, anticoagulation, rate control, rhythm control, risk factor modification, and, importantly, outcome measures. A full list is accessible in a paper, simultaneously published in EP EuroPace.

Five patient-reported outcomes fall under the outcomes domain but only one – health-related quality of life – is a main quality indicator. The remaining outcomes are still important but are listed as secondary because of the lack of evidence to sustain or defend their systematic implementation, particularly evidence on how to measure them appropriately, Dr. Arbelo said.

“Hopefully, following the [class I] recommendation by the 2020 ESC guidelines to routinely collect patient-reported outcomes will allow us to collect further evidence and in the future have sufficient evidence to include these as a main outcome,” she said.

The QI work was driven in parallel with the guidelines and had a huge impact on its development, including inclusion of clear recommendations on how to measure quality, Dr. Hindricks said. “I believe that the whole issue of quality management in the treatment of patients with a focus on patient values cannot be overestimated.”

Disclosure information for all writing committee members is in the report. Dr. Mandrola is a writer and podcaster for Medscape.

A version of this article originally appeared on Medscape.com.

Pages

Recommended Reading

Multisociety roadmap eyes restarting elective cardiac cases
Journal of Clinical Outcomes Management
Silent brain infarcts found in 3% of AFib patients, tied to cognitive decline
Journal of Clinical Outcomes Management
Many hydroxychloroquine COVID-19 prophylaxis trials lack ECG screening
Journal of Clinical Outcomes Management
More evidence hydroxychloroquine is ineffective, harmful in COVID-19
Journal of Clinical Outcomes Management
Lancet, NEJM retract studies on hydroxychloroquine for COVID-19
Journal of Clinical Outcomes Management
Preventing arrhythmias and QTc prolongation in COVID-19 patients on psychotropics
Journal of Clinical Outcomes Management
COVID-19: ‘dramatic’ surge in out-of-hospital cardiac arrests in NYC
Journal of Clinical Outcomes Management
How to reboot elective CV procedures after COVID-19 lockdown
Journal of Clinical Outcomes Management
‘Doubling down’ on hydroxychloroquine QT prolongation in COVID-19
Journal of Clinical Outcomes Management
Non-COVID-19 clinical trials grind to a halt during pandemic
Journal of Clinical Outcomes Management