4.5 Article

Atrial Fibrillation Is an Independent Risk Factor for Ventricular Fibrillation A Large-Scale Population-Based Case-Control Study

Journal

CIRCULATION-ARRHYTHMIA AND ELECTROPHYSIOLOGY
Volume 7, Issue 6, Pages 1033-1039

Publisher

LIPPINCOTT WILLIAMS & WILKINS
DOI: 10.1161/CIRCEP.114.002094

Keywords

arrhythmias, cardiac; atrial fibrillation; death, sudden, cardiac; ventricular fibrillation

Funding

  1. Netherlands Organization for Scientific Research (ZonMW) [Vici 918.86.616]
  2. Dutch Medicines Evaluation Board (MEB/CBG)
  3. Biobanking and Biomolecular Research Infrastructure, The Netherlands (BBMRI-NL)
  4. Netherlands CardioVascular Research Initiative (Dutch Heart Foundation
  5. Dutch Federation of University Medical Centres
  6. Netherlands Organisation for Health Research and Development
  7. Royal Netherlands Academy of Sciences [CVON2012-10]
  8. Netherlands Organization for Scientific Research [Mozaiek 017.003.084]

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Background-Atrial fibrillation (AF) is associated with sudden cardiac death. We aimed to study whether AF is associated with ventricular fibrillation (VF), the most common cause of sudden cardiac death and whether this association is independent of confounders, ie, concomitant disease, use of antiarrhythmic or QT-prolonging drugs, and acute myocardial infarction. Methods and Results-We performed a community-based case-control study. Cases were patients with out-of-hospital cardiac arrest because of ECG-documented VF. Controls were age-/sex-matched non-VF subjects from the community. VF risk in AF patients was studied by means of (conditional) logistic regression, adjusting for all available confounders. We studied 1397 VF cases and 3474 controls. AF occurred in 215 cases (15.4%) and 90 controls (2.6%). AF was associated with a 3-fold increased risk of VF (adjusted odds ratio, 3.1 [2.1-4.5]). VF risk in AF cases was increased to the same extent across all age/sex groups and in AF cases who had no comorbidity (adjusted odds ratio 3.0 [1.6-5.5]) or used no confounding drugs (antiarrhythmics, 2.4 [1.4-4.3]; QT-prolonging drugs, 3.1 [1.8-5.4]). VF risk was similarly increased in AF cases with acute myocardial infarction-related VF (adjusted odds ratio 2.6 [1.4-4.8]), and those with non-acute myocardial infarction-related VF (adjusted odds ratio 4.3 [1.9-10.1]). Conclusions-AF is independently associated with a 3-fold increased risk of VF. Comorbidity, use of antiarrhythmic or QT-prolonging drugs, or acute myocardial infarction does not fully account for this increased risk.

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