Impact of cardioversion strategy on functional capacity in patients with atrial fibrillation: The Assessment of Cardioversion Using Transesophageal Echocardiography (ACUTE) Study
2005
Background The ACUTE Trial studied a transesophageal echocardiography (TEE)–guided strategy compared with a conventional strategy for management of patients with atrial fibrillation undergoing direct current cardioversion. The primary aim was to determine if patient functional capacity, measured by the Duke Activity Status Index (DASI), would differ between treatment strategies. Methods The DASI was self-administered at study enrollment and at 8-week follow-up in 1074 (88%) of 1222 total patients. Clinical outcomes associated with enrollment DASI scores and change in follow-up DASI scores were reviewed. Results There was no difference between the TEE-guided (n = 544) and conventional treatment (n = 530) groups for mean baseline and 8-week DASI scores, adjusting for baseline; however, patients who improved their DASI score were more likely to be in the TEE-guided group ( P = .03). Pooled group data showed that the higher the enrollment DASI score, the more it tended to be positively related to maintenance of sinus rhythm ( P = .06) at 8 weeks. The lower the enrollment DASI score, the more it was predictive of death ( P = .03) and bleeding ( P = .01) within 8 weeks. Patients with congestive heart failure (CHF) at enrollment showed greater improvement in DASI scores at 8 weeks compared with patients without CHF (DASI Δ 45.9% vs 31.6%, P Conclusions There was no difference in DASI scores between treatment groups. However, TEE-guided treatment was a predictor of improved DASI at follow-up, and subgroup analysis showed that patients with CHF did show improvement in functional capacity with cardioversion.
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