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Coronary Embolism Among Patients With ST-Segment-Elevation Myocardial Infarction and Atrial Fibrillation: An Underrecognized But Deadly Association.
Journal of the American Heart Association 2024 May 14
BACKGROUND: The prevalence and impact of coronary emboli (CE) in patients with ST-segment-elevation myocardial infarction (STEMI) and atrial fibrillation (AF) have not been specifically studied. The objective was to describe the clinical characteristics and outcomes of patients with AF and CE in a large series of patients with STEMI.
METHODS AND RESULTS: We investigated 2292 consecutive patients with STEMI and among them 225 patients with AF: 46 patients with a STEMI related to CE (group A) and 179 patients with a STEMI related to an atherosclerotic cause (group B). Compared with the 2067 patients without AF and CE (group C), patients with AF and CE were older (73 versus 59 years, P <0.05), more likely to be female (43% versus 22%, P <0.05), and presented more frequently with cardiogenic shock at admission (26% versus 9%, P <0.05). The baseline characteristics of patients with AF (group A versus B) did not differ significantly according to STEMI pathogenesis. In the unadjusted analysis, the 45-day mortality was higher in patients with CE and AF (group A versus group C: 20% versus 4%; P <0.05 and group A versus group B: 20% versus 8%, P =not significant); this trend persisted at 2-year follow-up (group A versus group C: 24% versus 6%; P <0.05 and group A versus group B: 24% versus 17%, P =not significant). After stabilized inverse exposure probability weighting adjustment, a higher 45-day mortality rate was confirmed in patients with CE and AF (group A versus group C: 18% versus 5%, P <0.05).
CONCLUSIONS: In patients presenting with STEMI and AF, CE was associated with excess early mortality.
REGISTRATION: URL: clinicaltrials.gov. Identifier: NCT05679843.
METHODS AND RESULTS: We investigated 2292 consecutive patients with STEMI and among them 225 patients with AF: 46 patients with a STEMI related to CE (group A) and 179 patients with a STEMI related to an atherosclerotic cause (group B). Compared with the 2067 patients without AF and CE (group C), patients with AF and CE were older (73 versus 59 years, P <0.05), more likely to be female (43% versus 22%, P <0.05), and presented more frequently with cardiogenic shock at admission (26% versus 9%, P <0.05). The baseline characteristics of patients with AF (group A versus B) did not differ significantly according to STEMI pathogenesis. In the unadjusted analysis, the 45-day mortality was higher in patients with CE and AF (group A versus group C: 20% versus 4%; P <0.05 and group A versus group B: 20% versus 8%, P =not significant); this trend persisted at 2-year follow-up (group A versus group C: 24% versus 6%; P <0.05 and group A versus group B: 24% versus 17%, P =not significant). After stabilized inverse exposure probability weighting adjustment, a higher 45-day mortality rate was confirmed in patients with CE and AF (group A versus group C: 18% versus 5%, P <0.05).
CONCLUSIONS: In patients presenting with STEMI and AF, CE was associated with excess early mortality.
REGISTRATION: URL: clinicaltrials.gov. Identifier: NCT05679843.
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