Figures
Abstract
We previously reported that incident atrial fibrillation (AF) is associated with an increased risk of sudden cardiac death (SCD) in the general population. We now aimed to identify predictors of SCD in persons with AF from the Atherosclerosis Risk in Communities (ARIC) study, a community-based cohort study. We included all participants who attended visit 1 (1987–89) and had no prior AF (n = 14,836). Incident AF was identified from study electrocardiograms and hospitalization discharge codes through 2012. SCD was physician-adjudicated. We used cause-specific Cox proportional hazards models, followed by stepwise selection (backwards elimination, removing all variables with p>0.10) to identify predictors of SCD in participants with AF. AF occurred in 2321 (15.6%) participants (age 45–64 years, 58% male, 18% black). Over a median of 3.3 years, SCD occurred in 110 of those with AF (4.7%). Predictors of SCD in AF included higher age, body mass index (BMI), coronary heart disease, hypertension, diabetes, current smoker, left ventricular hypertrophy, increased heart rate, and decreased albumin. Predictors associated only with SCD and not other cardiovascular (CV) death included increased BMI (HR per 5-unit increase, 1.15, 95% CI, 0.97–1.36, p = 0.10), increased heart rate (HR per SD increase, 1.18, 95% CI 0.99–1.41, p = 0.07), and low albumin (HR per SD decrease 1.23, 95% CI 1.02–1.48, p = 0.03). In the ARIC study, predictors of SCD in AF that are not associated with non-sudden CV death included increased BMI, increased heart rate, and low albumin. Further research to confirm these findings in larger community-based cohorts and to elucidate the underlying mechanisms to facilitate prevention is warranted.
Citation: Koene RJ, Norby FL, Maheshwari A, Rooney MR, Soliman EZ, Alonso A, et al. (2017) Predictors of sudden cardiac death in atrial fibrillation: The Atherosclerosis Risk in Communities (ARIC) study. PLoS ONE 12(11): e0187659. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0187659
Editor: Chunhua Song, Pennsylvania State University, UNITED STATES
Received: June 18, 2017; Accepted: October 24, 2017; Published: November 8, 2017
Copyright: © 2017 Koene et al. This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
Data Availability: Study participants did not consent to have their data publicly available and freely accessible and, therefore, we cannot publicly share the data. However, the data underlying our work can be obtained through two mechanisms. First, interested investigators can contact the ARIC Coordinating Center at the University of North Carolina – Chapel Hill. Details about the procedures for data request can be found in the following website: http://www2.cscc.unc.edu/aric/distribution-agreements. Second, most ARIC data can be also obtained from BioLINCC, a repository maintained by the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute. The BioLINCC website (https://biolincc.nhlbi.nih.gov/) includes detailed information about the available data and the process to obtain such data. Any interested researcher could obtain a de-identified, minimal dataset needed to replicate or reprove our study findings pending ethical approval following any of the two mentioned mechanisms.
Funding: The Atherosclerosis Risk in Communities Study is carried out as a collaborative study supported by National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute contracts (HHSN268201100005C, HHSN268201100006C, HHSN268201100007C, HHSN268201100008C, HHSN268201100009C, HHSN268201100010C, HHSN268201100011C, and HHSN268201100012C). SCD adjudication in ARIC was supported by the Donald W. Reynolds Foundation. Additional support was provided by American Heart Association grant 16EIA2641000. The funders had no role in study design, data collection and analysis, decision to publish, or preparation of the manuscript.
Competing interests: The authors have declared that no competing interests exist.
Introduction
Atrial fibrillation (AF) is the most common chronic arrhythmia in the United States, with an estimated prevalence of 5.2 million in 2010 [1]. The detrimental complications of AF, including a markedly increased risk of stroke, heart failure, and overall mortality, impose a major public health burden [2,3]. More recently, we have recognized that AF is independently associated with a 2-fold increased risk of sudden cardiac death (SCD) in community-dwelling adults [4]. Little is known about the predictors of SCD in AF. Two recent post-hoc analyses of clinical trial data, one from the ENGAGE-TIMI 48 study (The Effective Anticoagulation with Factor Xa Next Generation in Atrial Fibrillation—Thrombolysis in Myocardial Infarction 48) and the other from the RE-LY trial (Randomized Evaluation of Long-Term Anticoagulant Therapy) [5,6], explored this knowledge gap. In these studies, SCD accounted for 32% and 22% of all AF-related deaths, respectively. Another study utilized data from a nation-wide health insurance database in Taiwan to assess this relationship [7]. Given limitations of these prior studies, including the highly selected participants inherent in randomized controlled trials, or in the Taiwan study, the lack of systematic adjudication of SCD, we extended this area of investigation among community-dwelling individuals that underwent rigorous adjudication of SCD. In the present study, we aimed to identify demographic or clinical factors that are associated with SCD in participants with AF in a community-based prospective cohort study—the Atherosclerosis Risk in Communities (ARIC) Study.
Methods
Study population
The ARIC Study is a prospective community-based cohort study designed to investigate the determinants of atherosclerosis and its clinical outcomes as well as variations in cardiovascular (CV) risk factors, medical care, and disease by race and sex [8]. Detailed methods have been previously published [8]. Briefly, from 1987 to 1989 (ARIC Study baseline), a total of 15,792 adults (55% women, 45–64 years of age) from four US communities (Forsyth County, North Carolina; Jackson, Mississippi; northwest suburbs of Minneapolis, Minnesota; and Washington County, Maryland) were enrolled and followed prospectively through examination 5 (2011–2013). Participants were mostly white in the Washington County and Minneapolis sites, exclusively black in Jackson, and a mix of both races in Forsyth County. In addition to the baseline examination (1987–1989), the ARIC Study has conducted 4 follow-up examinations (1990–1992, 1993–1995, 1996–1998, and 2011–2013), along with annual telephone calls to determine vital status and obtain information on hospitalizations from the previous year. Ongoing surveillance of local hospitals has simultaneously been used to identify hospitalizations of ARIC Study participants, and trained abstractors have collected information on discharge diagnoses. The ARIC Study was approved by the institutional review board at each participating center, and written informed consent was obtained from all participants. A full list of participating institutional review boards can be found in the supporting information (S1 Table).
Of the 15,792 ARIC participants at visit 1, we excluded 103 who were not white or black, 279 with prevalent AF or unreadable ECG, and 574 with missing covariates. After exclusions, the analysis cohort included 14,836 participants (Fig 1).
AF indicates atrial fibrillation; CV, cardiovascular; ECG, electrocardiogram.
Ascertainment of AF
For this study, we used visit 1 (1987–1989) as the baseline visit, and considered only incident AF occurring after that time. Individuals with AF identified at visit 1 were considered to have prevalent AF and were excluded from this analysis.
AF diagnoses were obtained from ECGs at study visits and hospital discharge records [9]. At each study exam, a 12-lead ECG was performed and transmitted electronically to the ARIC ECG reading center at EPICARE (Wake Forest School of Medicine, Winston-Salem, NC) for review and analysis using the GE Marquette 12-SL program (GE Marquette, Milwaukee, WI). The presence of AF or atrial flutter in the ECG was identified by a computer algorithm and confirmed by a cardiologist. If ECGs had any rhythm disorder other than AF, they were over-read by a cardiologist to reduce any missed episodes of AF. Information on hospitalizations during follow-up was obtained from annual follow-up calls and surveillance of local hospitals, with hospital discharge diagnoses codes collected by trained abstractors. AF during follow-up was considered to be present if the International Classification of Disease 9th revision Clinical Modification [ICD-9-CM] codes 427.31 or 427.32 were listed in any given hospitalization. AF cases associated with open cardiac surgery were not included in this study. Previous studies in the ARIC cohort and other populations have demonstrated adequate validity of discharge codes for the identification of AF [9,10].
Outcomes ascertainment
All ARIC Study participants were contacted annually by phone, and all hospitalizations and deaths in the previous year were identified [11]. Comprehensive data were gathered on CV events and deaths from hospital records; interviews with physicians, next of kin, and/or witnesses; death certificates; and autopsy reports, where available. Causes of death were adjudicated by the ARIC Study events committees. An independent review of coronary heart disease (CHD) deaths [12] was conducted to identify SCD events. The primary outcome, SCD, was defined in the ARIC Study as a sudden pulseless condition presumed to be due to a ventricular tachyarrhythmia in a previously stable individual without evidence of a noncardiac cause of cardiac arrest. All SCD cases occurred outside the hospital or in the emergency department, and the individuals could not have a life-threatening noncardiac comorbidity or be under hospice care. For unwitnessed deaths, the participant must have been seen within 24 hours of the arrest in a stable condition and without evidence of a noncardiac cause of cardiac arrest.
In the ARIC Study, all CHD deaths that occurred through 2012, were reviewed by a panel of 5 physicians to identify SCD events. Each event was independently adjudicated by 2 physicians. If there was disagreement, a third investigator reviewed the event to provide final classification. After review of available data, CHD deaths were classified as definite sudden arrhythmic death, possible sudden arrhythmic death, not sudden arrhythmic death, or unclassifiable [4,11,13]. For the present analysis, SCD was defined as definite or possible sudden arrhythmic deaths.
Measurement of other covariates
Covariates that have been reported to be associated with an increased risk of SCD in the broader population of typically non-AF persons were used for this study [5,6,14–17]. We used covariate measurements from the study visit immediately preceding incident AF diagnosis, thus from either visit 1, 2, 3, or 4. Definitions of the covariates are detailed in the Supporting Methods.
Statistical analysis
We report means with standard deviations (SDs) or medians and interquartile ranges (IQR) for continuous variables and counts with percentages for categorical variables. To evaluate the association of candidate variables with SCD, non-sudden CV death, and non-cardiovascular death, we used a cause-specific hazard model—a specific method used in competing risks analysis—which can be estimated with a Cox regression hazards model [18]. In addition, we performed a sensitivity analysis by fitting the Fine-Gray model, a proportional hazards model for the subdistribution of competing risks [19]. Except for potassium (taken at visit 1 only), ankle brachial index (visit 1 and 4), and albumin (visit 1 only), candidate variables were assessed at the visit just before AF ascertainment. First, we included all variables in the multivariable model. Next, we used a stepwise selection method (backwards elimination, removing all variables with a p-value >0.10) to fit the most parsimonious model for predicting SCD. Quadratic terms were evaluated for continuous variables. We performed the same analyses for non-sudden CV death. The proportional hazards assumption was assessed with scaled Schoenfeld residuals for both graphical and numerical tests, time interaction terms, and inspection of log negative log survival curves. Modeling assumptions were not violated in any model. Statistical analysis was performed using SAS version 9.2 (SAS Institute Inc., Cary, NC). All P values reported were 2-sided.
Results
During a median follow up of 23.3 years, 2321 (16%) developed incident AF. From this subset of individuals, we identified 110 (4.7%) cases of SCD over a median follow up of 3.3 years from the time of incident AF. A total of 375 non-sudden CV deaths occurred (Fig 1).
Table 1 shows characteristics of ARIC Study participants at the study visit preceding AF ascertainment, stratified by subsequent SCD occurrence. Mean age ± SD was 69.9±7.6 years in the SCD group versus 72.4±7.9 years in those without SCD. Blacks comprised 26% of those with SCD but only 18% of the overall AF population. Comorbid medical conditions were more prevalent in those with SCD than those without, including increased body mass index (BMI), CHD, heart failure, hypertension, diabetes, current smoking, LVH, and ankle brachial index<0.9. Those who developed SCD were also more likely to be on cardiac medications.
Predictors of SCD and non-sudden CV death using cause-specific hazards models
Table 2 lists the candidate variables, showing multivariable Cox proportional hazards ratios (HR) for their association with SCD, prior to backwards elimination. In the multivariable cause-specific method—accounting for non-sudden CV deaths and non-cardiovascular deaths—predictors of SCD in AF after backwards elimination included higher age, increased BMI, CHD, hypertension, diabetes, current smoker, LVH, increased heart rate, and decreased albumin (Table 3).
Table 2 also shows the multivariable HR of candidate variables for non-sudden CV death, prior to backwards elimination. After backwards elimination, predictors of non-sudden CV death in AF included higher age, black race, CHD, heart failure, hypertension, diabetes, current smoker, LVH, digoxin use, decreased eGFR, and prolonged QTc interval (Table 3).
The predictors significant for SCD but not non-sudden CV death were increased BMI (HR, 1.15, 95% CI, 0.97–1.36, p = 0.10) increased heart rate (HR, 1.18, 95% CI 0.99–1.41, p = 0.07), and low albumin (HR 1.23, 95% CI 1.02–1.48, p = 0.03) (Table 3).
Predictors of SCD and non-sudden CV death using the Fine-Gray method
S2 Table shows the multivariable HR of candidate variables for SCD, prior to backwards elimination. After backwards elimination, predictors of SCD in AF using the Fine-Gray method included higher age, increased BMI, CHD, hypertension, diabetes, current smoker, LVH, and decreased albumin (S3 Table). S2 Table shows the multivariable HR of candidate variables for non-sudden CV death, prior to backwards elimination. After backwards elimination, predictors of non-sudden CV death in AF using the Fine-Gray method included higher age, black race, CHD, heart failure, hypertension, diabetes, current smoker, LVH, digoxin, eGFR, and QTc interval (S3 Table).
The predictors significant for SCD but not non-sudden CV death were increased BMI (HR 1.14, 95% CI 0.97–1.36, p = 0.10) and low albumin (HR 1.19, 95% CI 1.00–1.42, p = 0.05) (S3 Table).
Discussion
In this large community-based prospective cohort study, we found several clinical characteristics that were associated with SCD in participants who developed AF. CHD was the strongest predictor (>3-fold risk), followed by diabetes and LVH (>2-fold risk), and then higher age, increased BMI, hypertension, smoking, increased heart rate, and low albumin (<2-fold risk). Predictors specific to SCD but not non-sudden CV death included increased BMI, increased heart rate, and low albumin. These results were robust to a sensitivity analysis using the Fine-Gray method. To our knowledge, there has been only one other investigation—outside of post-hoc clinical trial data—to assess predictors of SCD in community-dwelling individuals with AF.
SCD is the most common mode of death in AF patients. In the post-hoc analysis from the RE-LY trial, which randomized over 18,000 AF patients to either warfarin or dabigatran, the most common mode of death was SCD, accounting for 22% of total deaths [6]. Similarly, the post-hoc analysis from the ENGAGE AF-TIMI 48 Trial, which randomized over 21,000 AF patients to either edoxaban or warfarin, found SCD to be the most common mode of death, comprising 32% of total deaths [5].
Our work advances current knowledge over published clinical trials (ENGAGE TIMI 48 and RELY), by extending investigation on this topic to community-dwelling individuals. Further, unlike the report by Chao et al. which did not account for the competing risk of death and that was based on a nation-wide insurance database that lacked adjudication of SCD, our analysis accounted for the competing risk of death and was based on systematic expert adjudication of SCD. The ENGAGE TIMI 48, RE-LY, and nation-wide study in Taiwan findings have several similarities and differences compared with our study. Similar to ENGAGE TIMI 48, we found age, CHD, LVH, higher heart rate, and increased BMI to predict SCD in AF, but unlike ENGAGE TIMI 48 we did not find an association with digoxin use, heart failure, male sex, non-use of beta blockers, or peripheral artery disease. Similar to RE-LY, we found CHD and diabetes to predict SCD in AF, but unlike RE-LY we did not find an association with heart failure or male sex. Similar to the Taiwan study, we found age, hypertension, and diabetes to predict SCD in AF, but unlike the Taiwan study we did not find an association with heart failure, chronic kidney disease, or peripheral artery disease. Heart failure is a potential risk factor for SCD in patients with AF as heart failure strongly predicts SCD and CV mortality across many population types [20]. RE-LY and ENGAGE TIMI 48 analyses found strong associations between heart failure with both SCD and non-sudden CV deaths in AF patients, but in our study it only predicted non-sudden CV death. The Taiwan study also found heart failure to predict SCD in AF. In our study, it is possible that the low prevalence of heart failure prior to AF ascertainment (i.e. 4.5%), along with relatively few SCD events, may have limited statistical detection.
In both ENGAGE TIMI 48 and our study, higher heart rate was a unique predictor of SCD and not of non-sudden CV death. A higher resting heart rate is a sign of sympathetic overactivity, which has been associated with SCD, usually resulting from ventricular arrhythmia [21,22]. It has also been suggested that ischemic episodes that trigger arrhythmias are more likely to do so at higher heart rates [22]. β-blockers are well known to reduce sudden arrhythmic death, which may in part be through their heart rate lowering effect [23].
The association between obesity and CV morbidity and mortality is well known [24]. Furthermore, the association between obesity and SCD has been described [17,25]. In our analysis, we found obesity, as measured by increased BMI, to be uniquely associated with SCD (but not with non-sudden CV death), whereas the ENGAGE TIMI 48 found obesity to be associated with both SCD and other CV deaths.
While low albumin is widely known for being a predictor of poor outcomes across a variety of clinical settings, in our study we found it to be a predictor of SCD but not non-sudden CV deaths [26]. A prior ARIC study observed an inverse association of albumin with cardiac death, but did not find an independent association with the incidence of non-fatal myocardial infarction [16]. A combined analysis from ARIC and the Cardiovascular Health Study also found low albumin to be an independent predictor of SCD [14]. These findings are in agreement with an analysis from the MRFIT study, which found low albumin levels to be more strongly associated with CHD mortality (the majority of deaths being SCD) than with nonfatal myocardial infarction [27]. Therefore, low albumin level appears to be a marker for SCD in both AF and non-AF populations; the underlying mechanisms, however, are unknown. Factors that may contribute to hypoalbuminemia include exogenous loss of albumin, albumin re-distribution, catabolism rate of proteins, and inflammation [28]; these factors may explain the association of hypoalbuminemia with SCD.
Several electrophysiological mechanisms for the association between AF and SCD have been postulated. For example, the rapid ventricular rate of AF may reduce ventricular refractoriness, thus increasing the excitable gap in an existent reentrant circuit, leading to life-threatening arrhythmias [29]. Also, the irregular rhythm of AF leads to short-long-short sequences that are intrinsically pro-arrhythmic [30]. AF-related adverse myocardial remodeling, tachycardia-induced cardiomyopathy, and impaired calcium handling are additional possible mechanisms [31,32]. Finally, the association could, in part, be influenced by clinical factors such as higher heart rate, obesity, low albumin, heart failure, and CHD [33]. Our study advances the field by identifying clinical risk factors for SCD, thus facilitating the potential discovery of novel SCD prevention strategies in patients with AF.
The strengths of our study include a prospective community-based investigation with meticulous physician-adjudication of SCD, the large number of incident AF cases, and extensive measurement of covariates. Several limitations should be noted. Predictor variables were single measurements, which may be limited by the precision and accuracy of the measuring instrument and any changes that may have occurred over time. There was a relatively small number of SCD and non-sudden CV death events in comparison to previously reported clinical trials, which may have limited our ability to identify additional predictors of SCD. In addition, due to the relatively small number of events, of the 3 predictors of SCD which are not predictors of nonsudden CV deaths (increased BMI, increased heart rate, and low albumin) only low albumin is statistically significant at the p = 0.05 level. Although our findings suggest that increased BMI, increased heart rate, and low albumin may be specific predictors of SCD, the underlying mechanisms remain unclear. Finally, underdetection of AF may have occurred in asymptomatic subjects and ascertainment of AF by hospital discharge codes could lead to false positives. However, with regard to the latter, adequate validity using hospital codes for the identification of incident AF has been demonstrated in the ARIC Study [9].
Conclusion
In conclusion, our report—based on a large community-based cohort study—found that the predictors of SCD in persons with AF that are not associated with non-sudden CV deaths include increased BMI, increased heart rate, and low albumin. These findings will need to be confirmed in larger community-based cohorts with more SCD and non-sudden CV death events. Further research to elucidate the underlying mechanisms so as to facilitate discovery of novel SCD prevention strategies is warranted.
Supporting information
S1 Table. Ethics Committee/Institutional Review Board(s) that approved this study.
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0187659.s002
(DOCX)
S2 Table. Proportional subdistribution hazard ratios (95% Confidence Interval) for SCD and Non-sudden CV death in ARIC participants with incident AF.
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0187659.s003
(DOCX)
S3 Table. Parsimonious proportional subdistribution hazard model for prediction† of SCD and non-sudden CV death in participants with AF in the ARIC study.
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0187659.s004
(DOCX)
Acknowledgments
The authors thank the staff and participants of the ARIC Study for their important contributions.
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