Should we screen people for irregular heartbeat (known as atrial fibrillation, or AF for short) in an effort to prevent strokes? Experts debate the issue in The BMJ today.
The prevalence of irregular heartbeat is rising significantly and is associated with increased risk of heart failure, heart attack, strokes, and potentially dementia, explains Mark Lown at the University of Southampton.
Studies have shown that screen detected irregular heartbeat could be dangerous, therefore the possibility of using blood thinners for prevention of AF related strokes should be considered, he argues.
In a previous study, the use of blood thinners (anticoagulation therapy) was associated with “significantly reduced adjusted risk of stroke from 4% to 1%, and the risk of death from 7% to 4% in just 1.5 years,” Lown writes.
The main risk linked with AF screening is treating false positive cases (when healthy people are wrongly identified as sick), but Lown believes that trained clinicians can accurately confirm positive irregular heartbeat diagnoses from single-lead ECGs (which record the electrical activity of the heart) and further reduce the risk of false positives.
In addition, “intermittent screening together with repeated screening every few years could reduce the risk of false negative cases” (when sick people are wrongly identified as healthy).
Lown also suggests that single lead ECG devices are “inexpensive, non-invasive, re-usable, and convenient” and can help to “greatly reduce workload.”
And he notes that due to advances in algorithms and wearable technology, such as the Apple Watch, screening for irregular heartbeat could become a part of many people’s daily routine “whether we like it or not.”
But Patrick Moran at Trinity College Dublin raises concerns over the important gaps in evidence regarding the effect of screening on stroke outcomes.
While he acknowledges that there is evidence showing that screening increases the detection of irregular heartbeat, Moran argues that there are currently no studies which show that screening reduces the risk or severity of stroke, and so we don’t know whether the harms inherent in any screening programme would outweigh any benefits.
In an era when the scale of overdiagnosis and overtreatment in modern medicine is becoming increasingly clear, it is unwise to assume that increased detection always translates into improved health outcomes, and that the balance of risks and benefits for those identified through screening will be the same as those who are diagnosed after they develop symptoms, including the risk of bleeding from the use of blood thinners, he adds.
Clinical trials aiming to address these important issues are already underway, and Moran stresses that “we must wait for their results rather than pushing ahead with implementing a costly public health intervention.”
“From a policy perspective, there is also considerable ambiguity about how screening would be scaled up and implemented in practice,” he says.
Furthermore, while Moran notes the rapid development in ECG diagnostics through apps and wearable devices, he says that these have “the potential to diminish the applicability of previous research carried out using older technology.”
Like Lown, Moran believes that action is needed to combat the “looming epidemic” of irregular heartbeat.
But in the absence of reliable research confirming the health benefits of AF screening, he argues that the “growing international momentum” behind it should be “harnessed to ensure that important gaps in knowledge are filled.”
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