Cargando…

Smartphone and wearable detected atrial arrhythmias in Older Adults: Results of a fully digital European Case finding study

AIMS: Simplified detection of atrial arrhythmias via consumer-electronics would enable earlier therapy in at-risk populations. Whether this is feasible and effective in older populations is not known. METHODS AND RESULTS: The fully remote, investigator-initiated Smartphone and wearable detected atri...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Fabritz, L, Connolly, D L, Czarnecki, E, Dudek, D, Guasch, E, Haase, D, Huebner, T, Zlahoda-Huzior, A, Jolly, K, Kirchhof, P, Obergassel, J, Schotten, U, Vettorazzi, E, Winkelmann, S J, Zapf, A, Schnabel, R B
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Oxford University Press 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9779806/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36710894
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/ehjdh/ztac067
Descripción
Sumario:AIMS: Simplified detection of atrial arrhythmias via consumer-electronics would enable earlier therapy in at-risk populations. Whether this is feasible and effective in older populations is not known. METHODS AND RESULTS: The fully remote, investigator-initiated Smartphone and wearable detected atrial arrhythmia in Older Adults Case finding study (Smart in OAC—AFNET 9) digitally enrolled participants ≥65 years without known atrial fibrillation, not receiving oral anticoagulation in Germany, Poland, and Spain for 8 weeks. Participants were invited by media communications and direct contacts. Study procedures adhered to European data protection. Consenting participants received a wristband with a photoplethysmography sensor to be coupled to their smartphone. The primary outcome was the detection of atrial arrhythmias lasting 6 min or longer in the first 4 weeks of monitoring. Eight hundred and eighty-two older persons (age 71 ± 5 years, range 65–90, 500 (57%) women, 414 (47%) hypertension, and 97 (11%) diabetes) recorded signals. Most participants (72%) responded to adverts or word of mouth, leaflets (11%) or general practitioners (9%). Participation was completely remote in 469/882 persons (53%). During the first 4 weeks, participants transmitted PPG signals for 533/696 h (77% of the maximum possible time). Atrial arrhythmias were detected in 44 participants (5%) within 28 days, and in 53 (6%) within 8 weeks. Detection was highest in the first monitoring week [incidence rates: 1st week: 3.4% (95% confidence interval 2.4–4.9); 2nd–4th week: 0.55% (0.33–0.93)]. CONCLUSION: Remote, digitally supported consumer-electronics-based screening is feasible in older European adults and identifies atrial arrhythmias in 5% of participants within 4 weeks of monitoring (NCT04579159).