The ABC-Stroke Risk Score and Effects of Atrial Fibrillation Screening on Stroke Prevention: Results From the Randomized LOOP Study

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Standard

The ABC-Stroke Risk Score and Effects of Atrial Fibrillation Screening on Stroke Prevention : Results From the Randomized LOOP Study. / Xing, Lucas Yixi; Diederichsen, Søren Zöga; Højberg, Søren; Krieger, Derk W.; Graff, Claus; Frikke-Schmidt, Ruth; Platonov, Pyotr G.; Olesen, Morten S.; Brandes, Axel; Køber, Lars; Haugan, Ketil Jørgen; Svendsen, Jesper Hastrup.

I: Journal of the American Heart Association, Bind 13, Nr. 4, e032744, 2024.

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftTidsskriftartikelForskningfagfællebedømt

Harvard

Xing, LY, Diederichsen, SZ, Højberg, S, Krieger, DW, Graff, C, Frikke-Schmidt, R, Platonov, PG, Olesen, MS, Brandes, A, Køber, L, Haugan, KJ & Svendsen, JH 2024, 'The ABC-Stroke Risk Score and Effects of Atrial Fibrillation Screening on Stroke Prevention: Results From the Randomized LOOP Study', Journal of the American Heart Association, bind 13, nr. 4, e032744. https://doi.org/10.1161/JAHA.123.032744

APA

Xing, L. Y., Diederichsen, S. Z., Højberg, S., Krieger, D. W., Graff, C., Frikke-Schmidt, R., Platonov, P. G., Olesen, M. S., Brandes, A., Køber, L., Haugan, K. J., & Svendsen, J. H. (2024). The ABC-Stroke Risk Score and Effects of Atrial Fibrillation Screening on Stroke Prevention: Results From the Randomized LOOP Study. Journal of the American Heart Association, 13(4), [e032744]. https://doi.org/10.1161/JAHA.123.032744

Vancouver

Xing LY, Diederichsen SZ, Højberg S, Krieger DW, Graff C, Frikke-Schmidt R o.a. The ABC-Stroke Risk Score and Effects of Atrial Fibrillation Screening on Stroke Prevention: Results From the Randomized LOOP Study. Journal of the American Heart Association. 2024;13(4). e032744. https://doi.org/10.1161/JAHA.123.032744

Author

Xing, Lucas Yixi ; Diederichsen, Søren Zöga ; Højberg, Søren ; Krieger, Derk W. ; Graff, Claus ; Frikke-Schmidt, Ruth ; Platonov, Pyotr G. ; Olesen, Morten S. ; Brandes, Axel ; Køber, Lars ; Haugan, Ketil Jørgen ; Svendsen, Jesper Hastrup. / The ABC-Stroke Risk Score and Effects of Atrial Fibrillation Screening on Stroke Prevention : Results From the Randomized LOOP Study. I: Journal of the American Heart Association. 2024 ; Bind 13, Nr. 4.

Bibtex

@article{d361ebf7929a40ce866ee1d0ea463f2d,
title = "The ABC-Stroke Risk Score and Effects of Atrial Fibrillation Screening on Stroke Prevention: Results From the Randomized LOOP Study",
abstract = "BACKGROUND: The ABC-stroke score is a risk scheme for prediction of stroke or systemic embolism (SE) in atrial fibrillation (AF). This study sought to examine whether the score could be useful in predicting stroke in AF-na{\"i}ve individuals and risk stratifying for AF screening. METHODS AND RESULTS: The LOOP (Atrial Fibrillation Detected by Continuous ECG Monitoring Using Implantable Loop Recorder to Prevent Stroke in High-Risk Individuals) study randomized 6004 AF-na{\"i}ve individuals aged 70 to 90 years with stroke risk factors to either screening with an implantable loop recorder and anticoagulation upon detection of new-onset AF episodes ≥6 minutes, or usual care. A total of 5781 participants had available ABC-stroke score at baseline and were included in this secondary analysis: 4170 (72.1%) with an estimated stroke/SE risk ≤1%/year versus 1611 (27.9%) with an estimated stroke/SE risk >1%/year. Having an annual ABC-stroke risk >1% was associated with stroke/SE, stroke/SE/cardiovascular death, and all-cause death (hazard ratio, 1.82 [95% CI, 1.44-2.21], 2.17 [95% CI, 1.80-2.62], and 2.19 [95% CI, 1.87-2.56], respectively). For screening with implantable loop recorder versus usual care, no significant reduction in these study outcomes was obtained in any ABC-stroke risk groups (P>0.0500 for all), with no signal toward interaction (Pinteraction>0.2500 for all). Similar findings were yielded when assessing the ABC-stroke score as a continuous variable. CONCLUSIONS: In an elderly, AF-na{\"i}ve population with additional stroke risk factors, a higher ABC-stroke score could identify individuals with increased stroke risk. However, this risk score may not be useful in pinpointing those more likely to benefit from AF screening and subsequent preventive treatment. These findings should be considered as hypothesis generating and warrant further study. REGISTRATION: URL: https://www.clinicaltrials.gov; unique identifier: NCT02036450.",
keywords = "atrial fibrillation, cardiac biomarker, risk score, screening, stroke",
author = "Xing, {Lucas Yixi} and Diederichsen, {S{\o}ren Z{\"o}ga} and S{\o}ren H{\o}jberg and Krieger, {Derk W.} and Claus Graff and Ruth Frikke-Schmidt and Platonov, {Pyotr G.} and Olesen, {Morten S.} and Axel Brandes and Lars K{\o}ber and Haugan, {Ketil J{\o}rgen} and Svendsen, {Jesper Hastrup}",
year = "2024",
doi = "10.1161/JAHA.123.032744",
language = "English",
volume = "13",
journal = "Journal of the American Heart Association",
issn = "2047-9980",
publisher = "Wiley-Blackwell",
number = "4",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - The ABC-Stroke Risk Score and Effects of Atrial Fibrillation Screening on Stroke Prevention

T2 - Results From the Randomized LOOP Study

AU - Xing, Lucas Yixi

AU - Diederichsen, Søren Zöga

AU - Højberg, Søren

AU - Krieger, Derk W.

AU - Graff, Claus

AU - Frikke-Schmidt, Ruth

AU - Platonov, Pyotr G.

AU - Olesen, Morten S.

AU - Brandes, Axel

AU - Køber, Lars

AU - Haugan, Ketil Jørgen

AU - Svendsen, Jesper Hastrup

PY - 2024

Y1 - 2024

N2 - BACKGROUND: The ABC-stroke score is a risk scheme for prediction of stroke or systemic embolism (SE) in atrial fibrillation (AF). This study sought to examine whether the score could be useful in predicting stroke in AF-naïve individuals and risk stratifying for AF screening. METHODS AND RESULTS: The LOOP (Atrial Fibrillation Detected by Continuous ECG Monitoring Using Implantable Loop Recorder to Prevent Stroke in High-Risk Individuals) study randomized 6004 AF-naïve individuals aged 70 to 90 years with stroke risk factors to either screening with an implantable loop recorder and anticoagulation upon detection of new-onset AF episodes ≥6 minutes, or usual care. A total of 5781 participants had available ABC-stroke score at baseline and were included in this secondary analysis: 4170 (72.1%) with an estimated stroke/SE risk ≤1%/year versus 1611 (27.9%) with an estimated stroke/SE risk >1%/year. Having an annual ABC-stroke risk >1% was associated with stroke/SE, stroke/SE/cardiovascular death, and all-cause death (hazard ratio, 1.82 [95% CI, 1.44-2.21], 2.17 [95% CI, 1.80-2.62], and 2.19 [95% CI, 1.87-2.56], respectively). For screening with implantable loop recorder versus usual care, no significant reduction in these study outcomes was obtained in any ABC-stroke risk groups (P>0.0500 for all), with no signal toward interaction (Pinteraction>0.2500 for all). Similar findings were yielded when assessing the ABC-stroke score as a continuous variable. CONCLUSIONS: In an elderly, AF-naïve population with additional stroke risk factors, a higher ABC-stroke score could identify individuals with increased stroke risk. However, this risk score may not be useful in pinpointing those more likely to benefit from AF screening and subsequent preventive treatment. These findings should be considered as hypothesis generating and warrant further study. REGISTRATION: URL: https://www.clinicaltrials.gov; unique identifier: NCT02036450.

AB - BACKGROUND: The ABC-stroke score is a risk scheme for prediction of stroke or systemic embolism (SE) in atrial fibrillation (AF). This study sought to examine whether the score could be useful in predicting stroke in AF-naïve individuals and risk stratifying for AF screening. METHODS AND RESULTS: The LOOP (Atrial Fibrillation Detected by Continuous ECG Monitoring Using Implantable Loop Recorder to Prevent Stroke in High-Risk Individuals) study randomized 6004 AF-naïve individuals aged 70 to 90 years with stroke risk factors to either screening with an implantable loop recorder and anticoagulation upon detection of new-onset AF episodes ≥6 minutes, or usual care. A total of 5781 participants had available ABC-stroke score at baseline and were included in this secondary analysis: 4170 (72.1%) with an estimated stroke/SE risk ≤1%/year versus 1611 (27.9%) with an estimated stroke/SE risk >1%/year. Having an annual ABC-stroke risk >1% was associated with stroke/SE, stroke/SE/cardiovascular death, and all-cause death (hazard ratio, 1.82 [95% CI, 1.44-2.21], 2.17 [95% CI, 1.80-2.62], and 2.19 [95% CI, 1.87-2.56], respectively). For screening with implantable loop recorder versus usual care, no significant reduction in these study outcomes was obtained in any ABC-stroke risk groups (P>0.0500 for all), with no signal toward interaction (Pinteraction>0.2500 for all). Similar findings were yielded when assessing the ABC-stroke score as a continuous variable. CONCLUSIONS: In an elderly, AF-naïve population with additional stroke risk factors, a higher ABC-stroke score could identify individuals with increased stroke risk. However, this risk score may not be useful in pinpointing those more likely to benefit from AF screening and subsequent preventive treatment. These findings should be considered as hypothesis generating and warrant further study. REGISTRATION: URL: https://www.clinicaltrials.gov; unique identifier: NCT02036450.

KW - atrial fibrillation

KW - cardiac biomarker

KW - risk score

KW - screening

KW - stroke

U2 - 10.1161/JAHA.123.032744

DO - 10.1161/JAHA.123.032744

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 38353260

AN - SCOPUS:85185614424

VL - 13

JO - Journal of the American Heart Association

JF - Journal of the American Heart Association

SN - 2047-9980

IS - 4

M1 - e032744

ER -

ID: 384252341