'Pill-in-the-pocket' oral anticoagulation guided by daily rhythm monitoring for stroke prevention in patients with AF: a systematic review and meta-analysis
'Pill-in-the-pocket' oral anticoagulation guided by daily rhythm monitoring for stroke prevention in patients with AF: a systematic review and meta-analysis
Aims: in patients with a low AF burden and long periods of sinus rhythm, ‘pill-in-the-pocket’ oral anticoagulation (OAC) may, taken as needed in response to AF episodes, offer the same thromboembolic protection as continuous, life-long OAC, while reducing bleeding complications at the same time. The purpose of this study is to systematically summarise available evidence pertaining to the feasibility, safety and efficacy of pill-in-the-pocket OAC.
Methods: Medline and Embase were searched from inception to July 2022 for studies adopting a pill-in-the-pocket OAC strategy in AF patients guided by daily rhythm monitoring (PROSPERO/CRD42020209564). Outcomes of interest were extracted and event rates per patient-years of follow-up were calculated. A random effects model was used for pooled estimates.
Results: eight studies were included (711 patients). Daily rhythm monitoring was continuous in six studies and intermittent in two (pulse checks or smartphone singlelead electrocardiograms were used). Anticoagulation criteria varied across studies, reflecting the uncertainty regarding the AF burden that warrants anticoagulation. The mean time from AF meeting OAC criteria to its initiation was not reported. Adopting pill-in-the-pocket OAC led to 390 (54.7%) patients stopping OAC, 85 (12.0%) patients taking pill-in-the-pocket OAC and 237 (33.3%) patients remaining on or returning to continuous OAC. Overall, annualised ischaemic stroke and major bleeding rates per patient-year of follow-up were low at 0.005 (95% CI [0.002–0.012]) and 0.024 (95% CI [0.013–0.043]), respectively.
Conclusion: current evidence, although encouraging, is insufficient to inform practice. Additional studies are required to improve our understanding of the relationships between AF burden and thromboembolic risk to help define anticoagulation criteria and appropriate monitoring strategies.
e Gala, Andre Briosa
34a2d479-092a-48bb-aa0e-4a0e79a8658a
Pope, Michael Timothy Brian
732694a5-fb5e-49af-9d51-44cd532612e3
Leo, Milena
2c5bfb4c-f7b9-4c43-9f19-ef60d001cb6f
Sharp, Alexander James
da876fb7-16c0-42b0-8979-74102b2889ab
Tsoi, Victor
39016b05-6977-467f-abef-3c4a5ddced7e
Paisey, John
ab235a0e-884c-4b1a-8292-1281e441d074
Curzen, Nick
70f3ea49-51b1-418f-8e56-8210aef1abf4
Betts, Timothy Rider
ddd6271a-7c72-43bc-80f6-7cfd99402c9c
e Gala, Andre Briosa
34a2d479-092a-48bb-aa0e-4a0e79a8658a
Pope, Michael Timothy Brian
732694a5-fb5e-49af-9d51-44cd532612e3
Leo, Milena
2c5bfb4c-f7b9-4c43-9f19-ef60d001cb6f
Sharp, Alexander James
da876fb7-16c0-42b0-8979-74102b2889ab
Tsoi, Victor
39016b05-6977-467f-abef-3c4a5ddced7e
Paisey, John
ab235a0e-884c-4b1a-8292-1281e441d074
Curzen, Nick
70f3ea49-51b1-418f-8e56-8210aef1abf4
Betts, Timothy Rider
ddd6271a-7c72-43bc-80f6-7cfd99402c9c
e Gala, Andre Briosa, Pope, Michael Timothy Brian, Leo, Milena, Sharp, Alexander James, Tsoi, Victor, Paisey, John, Curzen, Nick and Betts, Timothy Rider
(2023)
'Pill-in-the-pocket' oral anticoagulation guided by daily rhythm monitoring for stroke prevention in patients with AF: a systematic review and meta-analysis.
Arrhythmia & Electrophysiology Review, 12, [e05].
(doi:10.15420/aer.2022.22).
Abstract
Aims: in patients with a low AF burden and long periods of sinus rhythm, ‘pill-in-the-pocket’ oral anticoagulation (OAC) may, taken as needed in response to AF episodes, offer the same thromboembolic protection as continuous, life-long OAC, while reducing bleeding complications at the same time. The purpose of this study is to systematically summarise available evidence pertaining to the feasibility, safety and efficacy of pill-in-the-pocket OAC.
Methods: Medline and Embase were searched from inception to July 2022 for studies adopting a pill-in-the-pocket OAC strategy in AF patients guided by daily rhythm monitoring (PROSPERO/CRD42020209564). Outcomes of interest were extracted and event rates per patient-years of follow-up were calculated. A random effects model was used for pooled estimates.
Results: eight studies were included (711 patients). Daily rhythm monitoring was continuous in six studies and intermittent in two (pulse checks or smartphone singlelead electrocardiograms were used). Anticoagulation criteria varied across studies, reflecting the uncertainty regarding the AF burden that warrants anticoagulation. The mean time from AF meeting OAC criteria to its initiation was not reported. Adopting pill-in-the-pocket OAC led to 390 (54.7%) patients stopping OAC, 85 (12.0%) patients taking pill-in-the-pocket OAC and 237 (33.3%) patients remaining on or returning to continuous OAC. Overall, annualised ischaemic stroke and major bleeding rates per patient-year of follow-up were low at 0.005 (95% CI [0.002–0.012]) and 0.024 (95% CI [0.013–0.043]), respectively.
Conclusion: current evidence, although encouraging, is insufficient to inform practice. Additional studies are required to improve our understanding of the relationships between AF burden and thromboembolic risk to help define anticoagulation criteria and appropriate monitoring strategies.
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Accepted/In Press date: 6 October 2022
e-pub ahead of print date: 2 March 2023
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Local EPrints ID: 492002
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/492002
PURE UUID: a3a36d8b-2dfe-4502-9bcb-70dd3240d6c4
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Date deposited: 11 Jul 2024 16:36
Last modified: 12 Jul 2024 01:43
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Author:
Andre Briosa e Gala
Author:
Michael Timothy Brian Pope
Author:
Milena Leo
Author:
Alexander James Sharp
Author:
Victor Tsoi
Author:
John Paisey
Author:
Timothy Rider Betts
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