Management and outcomes of patients with atrial fibrillation and a history of cancer: the ORBIT-AF registry.

dc.contributor.author

Melloni, Chiara

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Shrader, Peter

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Carver, Joseph

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Piccini, Jonathan P

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Thomas, Laine

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Fonarow, Gregg C

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Ansell, Jack

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Gersh, Bernard

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Go, Alan S

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Hylek, Elaine

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Herling, Irving M

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Mahaffey, Kenneth W

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Yu, Anthony F

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Peterson, Eric D

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Kowey, Peter R

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ORBIT-AF Steering Committee

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England

dc.date.accessioned

2017-09-01T15:42:50Z

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2017-09-01T15:42:50Z

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2017-07-01

dc.description.abstract

Aims: The presence of cancer can complicate treatment choices for patients with atrial fibrillation (AF) increasing both the risk of thrombotic and bleeding events. Methods and results: Using data from Outcomes Registry for Better Informed Treatment of Atrial Fibrillation, we aimed to characterize AF patients with cancer, to describe their management and to assess the association between cancer and cardiovascular (CV) outcomes. Among 9749 patients, 23.8% had history of cancer (57% solid malignancy, 1.3% leukaemia, 3.3% lymphoma, 40% other type, and 2.2% metastatic cancer). Patients with history of cancer were older, more likely to have CV disease, CV risk factors, and prior gastrointestinal bleeding. No difference in antiarrhythmic and antithrombotic therapy was observed between those with and without cancer. Patients with history of cancer had a significantly higher risk of death (7.8 vs. 4.9 deaths per 100 patient-years follow-up, P = 0.0003) mainly driven by non-CV death (4.2 vs. 2.4 per 100 patient-years follow-up; P = 0.0004) and higher risk of major bleeding (5.1 vs. 3.5 per 100 patient-years follow-up; P = 0.02) compared with non-cancer patients; no differences were observed in risks of strokes/non-central nervous system embolism (1.96 vs. 1.48, P = 0.74) and CV death (2.89 vs. 2.07, P = 0.35) between the two groups. Conclusion: A history of cancer is common among AF patients with up to one in four patients having both. Antithrombotic therapy, rates of cerebrovascular accident, other thrombotic events and cardiac death were similar in AF patients with or without a history of cancer. Patients with cancer, however, were at higher risk of major bleeding and non-CV death.

dc.identifier

https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/28838088

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2999754

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2058-1742

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https://hdl.handle.net/10161/15414

dc.language

eng

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Oxford University Press (OUP)

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Eur Heart J Qual Care Clin Outcomes

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10.1093/ehjqcco/qcx004

dc.subject

Anticoagulant therapy

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Atrial fibrillation

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Cancer

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Management and outcomes of patients with atrial fibrillation and a history of cancer: the ORBIT-AF registry.

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Journal article

duke.contributor.orcid

Piccini, Jonathan P|0000-0003-0772-2404

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Peterson, Eric D|0000-0002-5415-4721

pubs.author-url

https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/28838088

pubs.begin-page

192

pubs.end-page

197

pubs.issue

3

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Clinical Science Departments

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Duke

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Duke Clinical Research Institute

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Institutes and Centers

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Medicine

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Medicine, Clinical Pharmacology

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School of Medicine

pubs.publication-status

Published

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3

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