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June 09, 2020
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AF without other CV comorbidities confers no elevated risk for stroke

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Atrial fibrillation alone with no other CV comorbidities conferred no greater risk for stroke compared with patients with neither AF nor CV comorbidities.

However, patients without AF but with CV comorbidities experienced an elevated risk for both stroke and cardioembolic stroke, according to findings from the REGARDS study published in the Journal of the American Heart Association.

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Researchers classified 28,253 participants (mean age, 65 years; 55% women) into one of four groups based on the presence or absence of AF and the presence or absence of CV comorbidities.

They observed that participants with AF alone had no elevated risk for stroke compared with patients with neither AF nor CV comorbidities (HR = 1.23; 95% CI, 0.62-2.18).

“In this analysis of the REGARDS study cohort, we found no evidence of an increased risk of stroke among participants with AF without cardiovascular comorbidities, compared with the reference group of those with neither AF nor cardiovascular comorbidities,” Matthew J. Singleton, MD, MBE, MSc, MHS, of the section of cardiology at the Wake Forest School of Medicine, Winston-Salem, North Carolina, and colleagues wrote. “This finding was consistent in subgroup analyses. However, there was evidence of effect modification between age (< 64 vs. 64 years) and group. For those with cardiovascular comorbidities without AF, we found an increased risk of cardioembolic stroke, even in the absence of AF.”

In other findings, participants without AF but with CV comorbidities experienced an elevated risk for both stroke (HR = 1.77; 95% CI, 1.48-2.18) and cardioembolic stroke (HR = 2.34; 95% CI, 1.48-3.9) compared with those without AF or CV comorbidities.

“We feel that our study adds substantively to the existing literature owing to the size of the subcohort of participants with AF without cardiovascular comorbidities,” the researchers wrote. “In addition, our study is the first analysis of a large cohort of patients with AF without cardiovascular comorbidities that was able to adjust for race, education and income by utilizing a biracial nationwide prospective cohort in which there was formal adjudication of events from the medical record and long-term follow-up was available.”