Combating arrhythmia by controlling heart rate

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ken

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http://www.latimes.com/features/health/la-he-atrial9dec09,0,1018793.story?coll=la-headlines-health
Combating arrhythmia by controlling heart rate
The most common treatments may not be the best choice, a study says.
By Jane E. Allen
Times Staff Writer

December 9 2002

Many people with a common heart rhythm abnormality may not be getting the most effective treatment.

The first step in treating atrial fibrillation, especially among elderly patients, should be controlling the rate at which the heart beats, rather than trying to correct the rhythm, a large comparison study has concluded.

Patients getting either treatment felt better, but those given rhythm-correcting medications or a heart-shocking procedure called cardioversion had more hospitalizations and medication side effects than those taking drugs to control their heart rate, researchers found.

The study of 4,060 U.S. and Canadian patients, published in the Dec. 5 issue of the New England Journal of Medicine, along with a smaller European study in the same issue, is likely to change the way doctors treat atrial fibrillation, which affects 2.3 million Americans and is expected to affect as many as 6 million by 2040 as the baby boomers age.

"In older folks, I think a lot more of them are going to get rate control," said Dr. D. George Wyse, a cardiology professor at the University of Calgary in Canada.

With atrial fibrillation, the upper chambers of the heart, called the atria, contract so quickly that they quiver. As a result, they don't pump blood properly into the lower chambers, called the ventricles. The heartbeat becomes erratic and blood flow can become stagnant, increasing the risk that clots will form and travel to the brain, resulting in a stroke. Although some patients report no symptoms, others experience heart palpitations, shortness of breath and dizziness.

The problem is chronic; even when fibrillation is brought under control, "it's going to come back," Wyse said.

The new data finally give doctors information upon which to base their treatment decisions, which changed with the arrival of anti-arrhythmia drugs in the late 1970s and 1980s. For the first time, there were drugs "that had a reasonable chance of getting you back into a normal rhythm," Wyse said. Consequently, most doctors moved away from the older strategy of going after the heart rate with drugs such as digitalis, beta blockers and calcium channel blockers.

"This is a back-to-the-future story, a less-is-more story," said Wyse, who chaired the steering committee for the study, called Atrial Fibrillation Follow-up Investigation of Rhythm Management, sponsored by the National Heart, Lung and Blood Institute of the National Institutes of Health. With the anti-arrhythmic drugs, "everybody just assumed there were a lot of advantages; if you were in a normal rhythm, you'd feel better."

But the reality was that the newer drugs, such as amiodarone, which can cause a potentially fatal condition called pulmonary fibrosis, were tough on patients, and many of them still had recurrences of their fibrillation.

The study also demonstrated the importance of patients with the rhythm disorder taking an anticoagulant, such as warfarin. Although rhythm control treatments were supposed to let patients stop taking warfarin, Wyse said, "what we found is you can't stop warfarin: Most strokes in both groups occur when they stop the warfarin or when the dose is too low."
 
HUH?

I still don't get it and I've read the article twice.

I *THINK* they mean to say that the old approach of using Digoxin or Beta Blockers is the preferred approach but that is NOT at all clear in the post. The ONLY clear statement is that it is best to continue Coumadin if you have or are prone to have A-Fib.

When I accessed the link, I got a FAILURE notice.

Does anyone have a clearer understanding of this article?

'AL'
 
A Comparison of Rate Control and Rhythm Control in Patients with Atrial Fibrillation

A Comparison of Rate Control and Rhythm Control in Patients with Atrial Fibrillation

http://content.nejm.org/cgi/content/abstract/347/23/1825

A Comparison of Rate Control and Rhythm Control in Patients with Atrial Fibrillation

The Atrial Fibrillation Follow-up Investigation of Rhythm Management (AFFIRM) Investigators

ABSTRACT

Background There are two approaches to the treatment of atrial fibrillation: one is cardioversion and treatment with antiarrhythmic drugs to maintain sinus rhythm, and the other is the use of rate-controlling drugs, allowing atrial fibrillation to persist. In both approaches, the use of anticoagulant drugs is recommended.

Methods We conducted a randomized, multicenter comparison of these two treatment strategies in patients with atrial fibrillation and a high risk of stroke or death. The primary end point was overall mortality.

Results A total of 4060 patients (mean [±SD] age, 69.7±9.0 years) were enrolled in the study; 70.8 percent had a history of hypertension, and 38.2 percent had coronary artery disease. Of the 3311 patients with echocardiograms, the left atrium was enlarged in 64.7 percent and left ventricular function was depressed in 26.0 percent. There were 356 deaths among the patients assigned to rhythm-control therapy and 310 deaths among those assigned to rate-control therapy (mortality at five years, 23.8 percent and 21.3 percent, respectively; hazard ratio, 1.15 [95 percent confidence interval, 0.99 to 1.34]; P=0.08). More patients in the rhythm-control group than in the rate-control group were hospitalized, and there were more adverse drug effects in the rhythm-control group as well. In both groups, the majority of strokes occurred after warfarin had been stopped or when the international normalized ratio was subtherapeutic.

Conclusions Management of atrial fibrillation with the rhythm-control strategy offers no survival advantage over the rate-control strategy, and there are potential advantages, such as a lower risk of adverse drug effects, with the rate-control strategy. Anticoagulation should be continued in this group of high-risk patients.

Source Information

The AFFIRM writing group (D.G. Wyse, A.L. Waldo, J.P. DiMarco, M.J. Domanski, Y. Rosenberg, E.B. Schron, J.C. Kellen, H.L. Greene, M.C. Mickel, J.E. Dalquist, and S.D. Corley) assumes overall responsibility for the content of the manuscript.

Address reprint requests to the AFFIRM Clinical Trial Center, Axio Research, 2601 4th Ave., Ste. 200, Seattle, WA 98121, or to [email protected].
 
A Comparison of Rate Control and Rhythm Control in Patients with Recurrent Persistent

A Comparison of Rate Control and Rhythm Control in Patients with Recurrent Persistent

http://content.nejm.org/cgi/content/abstract/347/23/1834

A Comparison of Rate Control and Rhythm Control in Patients with Recurrent Persistent Atrial Fibrillation

Isabelle C. Van Gelder, M.D., Vincent E. Hagens, M.D., Hans A. Bosker, M.D., J. Herre Kingma, M.D., Otto Kamp, M.D., Tsjerk Kingma, M.Sc., Salah A. Said, M.D., Julius I. Darmanata, M.D., Alphons J.M. Timmermans, M.D., Jan G.P. Tijssen, Ph.D., Harry J.G.M. Crijns, M.D., for the Rate Control versus Electrical Cardioversion for Persistent Atrial Fibrillation Study Group

ABSTRACT

Background Maintenance of sinus rhythm is the main therapeutic goal in patients with atrial fibrillation. However, recurrences of atrial fibrillation and side effects of antiarrhythmic drugs offset the benefits of sinus rhythm. We hypothesized that ventricular rate control is not inferior to the maintenance of sinus rhythm for the treatment of atrial fibrillation.

Methods We randomly assigned 522 patients who had persistent atrial fibrillation after a previous electrical cardioversion to receive treatment aimed at rate control or rhythm control. Patients in the rate-control group received oral anticoagulant drugs and rate-slowing medication. Patients in the rhythm-control group underwent serial cardioversions and received antiarrhythmic drugs and oral anticoagulant drugs. The end point was a composite of death from cardiovascular causes, heart failure, thromboembolic complications, bleeding, implantation of a pacemaker, and severe adverse effects of drugs.

Results After a mean (±SD) of 2.3±0.6 years, 39 percent of the 266 patients in the rhythm-control group had sinus rhythm, as compared with 10 percent of the 256 patients in the rate-control group. The primary end point occurred in 44 patients (17.2 percent) in the rate-control group and in 60 (22.6 percent) in the rhythm-control group. The 90 percent (two-sided) upper boundary of the absolute difference in the primary end point was 0.4 percent (the prespecified criterion for noninferiority was 10 percent or less). The distribution of the various components of the primary end point was similar in the rate-control and rhythm-control groups.

Conclusions Rate control is not inferior to rhythm control for the prevention of death and morbidity from cardiovascular causes and may be appropriate therapy in patients with a recurrence of persistent atrial fibrillation after electrical cardioversion.


Source Information

From the Department of Cardiology (I.C.V.G., V.E.H., H.J.G.M.C.) and the Trial Coordination Center (T.K.), University Hospital, Groningen; Rijnstate Hospital, Arnhem (H.A.B.); St. Antonius Hospital, Nieuwegein (J.H.K.); Free University Medical Center, Amsterdam (O.K.); Hospital Midden-Twente, Hengelo (S.A.S.); Twenteborg Hospital, Almelo (J.I.D.); Medisch Spectrum Twente, Enschede (A.J.M.T.); and Academic Medical Center, Amsterdam (J.G.P.T.) ? all in the Netherlands.

Address reprint requests to Dr. Van Gelder at the Department of Cardiology, Thoraxcenter, University Hospital Groningen, P.O. Box 30.001, 9700 RB Groningen, the Netherlands, or at [email protected].
 

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