Avoiding cardiovascular risk factors
could prevent more than half of all cases of atrial fibrillation
Reducing cardiovascular risk factors like high blood
pressure, smoking, diabetes and being overweight could potentially reduce more
than half of all cases of atrial fibrillation, according to research reported
in Circulation: Journal of the American Heart Association.
Atrial fibrillation (AF) affects about 3 percent to 5 percent of people over
age 65 and is related to about 15 percent of all strokes.
"We now know that a significant proportion of all cases of atrial fibrillation
can be avoided," said Alvaro Alonso, M.D., M.P.H., Ph.D., co-author of the
study and assistant professor of epidemiology and community health at the University
of Minnesota School of Public Health in Minneapolis. "Ideally, if individuals
were able to maintain a normal blood pressure and healthy body weight and didn't
smoke, not only would it reduce their risks for other forms of cardiovascular
disease, such as heart disease and stroke, but it also would significantly impact
the risk of developing atrial fibrillation in later life."
In the study, 57 percent of the AF episodes were linked to specific risk factors,
including high blood pressure, smoking, diabetes, overweight and other heart diseases.
Of these risks, high blood pressure was the strongest predictor, accounting for
more than one-fifth of all cases.
The researchers also identified gender and racial differences in risk factor
prevalence, with more than 80 percent of African Americans having one or more
risk factors compared to 60 percent of whites. Only about 2 percent of African-American
men and African-American women had optimal risk factors versus 3 percent white
men and 10 percent of white women with optimal risk.
"A lot of work needs to be done to try to ensure that African-Americans
in particular achieve optimal levels of blood pressure and diabetes control,"
said Rachel R. Huxley, D.Phil., lead author and associate professor of epidemiology
and community health at the University of Minnesota School of Public Health.
Only 5 percent of participants overall had optimal levels of risk factors for
preventing AF. Slightly more than one-fourth were classified as having a borderline
risk factor profile and two-thirds of study participants had elevated risk factor
levels. Patients with optimal levels of risk factors had one-third of the risk
of developing AF compared with those with an elevated risk factor profile.
During the study, 1,520 episodes of AF occurred.
Population risk estimates showed that having one or more elevated risk factor
level could explain 50 percent of AF events. In whites, the risk was 50 percent
in women and 38.2 percent in men. In African Americans, the risk of AF associated
with having one or more elevated risk factors was 94 percent in women and 91 percent
in men.
The study comprised 14,598 participants in the Atherosclerosis Risk in Communities
Study (ARIC), a prospective study of heart disease among residents of four communities
in North Carolina, Mississippi, Maryland and Minnesota. Their average age was
54 years old, 55 percent were women, 75 percent were white and 25 percent were
African-American. The study started in 1987, and follow-up averaged 17 years.
After an initial interview and medical exam, investigators divided participants
into one of three groups based on their risk factors for AF: optimal, borderline
and elevated. Patients in the optimal-risk group had normal blood pressure and
weight, no heart disease or diabetes, and no smoking history.
Patients in the other two groups had increased risks in these categories.
Other co-authors are: Faye L. Lopez, M.P.H.; Aaron R. Folsom, M.D., M.P.H.;
Sunil K. Agarwal, M.D., M.P.H., Ph.D.; Laura R. Loehr, M.D., M.S., Ph.D.; Elsayed
Z. Soliman, M.D., M.Sc., M.S.; Rich Maclehose, Ph.D.; and Suma Konety, M.D., M.S.
The National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute and the American Heart Association
funded the study. Author disclosures are on the manuscript.
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