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Hypertension and Atrial Fibrillation: A Frontier Review From the AF-SCREEN International Collaboration

Authors
 Teemu J Niiranen  ;  Renate B Schnabel  ;  Aletta E Schutte  ;  Yitschak Biton  ;  Giuseppe Boriani  ;  Claire Buckley  ;  Alan C Cameron  ;  Albertino Damasceno  ;  Søren Z Diederichsen  ;  Wolfram Doehner  ;  Yutao Guo  ;  F D Richard Hobbs  ;  Boyoung Joung  ;  Graeme J Hankey  ;  Gregory Y H Lip  ;  Trudie Lobban  ;  Maja-Lisa Løchen  ;  Georges Mairesse  ;  Amam Mbakwem  ;  Peter A Noseworthy  ;  George Ntaios  ;  Steven Steinhubl  ;  George Stergiou  ;  Jesper Hastrup Svendsen  ;  Robert G Tieleman  ;  Jiguang Wang  ;  Neil R Poulter  ;  Jeff S Healey  ;  Ben Freedman 
Citation
 CIRCULATION, Vol.151(12) : 863-877, 2025-03 
Journal Title
CIRCULATION
ISSN
 0009-7322 
Issue Date
2025-03
MeSH
Antihypertensive Agents / therapeutic use ; Atrial Fibrillation* / diagnosis ; Atrial Fibrillation* / epidemiology ; Atrial Fibrillation* / physiopathology ; Atrial Fibrillation* / prevention & control ; Blood Pressure / drug effects ; Humans ; Hypertension* / diagnosis ; Hypertension* / drug therapy ; Hypertension* / epidemiology ; Hypertension* / physiopathology ; Risk Factors
Keywords
atrial fibrillation ; hypertension ; prevention ; screening.
Abstract
Hypertension is the leading modifiable risk factor for atrial fibrillation (AF) and is estimated to be present in >70% of AF patients. This Frontiers Review was prepared by 29 expert members of the AF-SCREEN International Collaboration to summarize existing evidence and knowledge gaps on links between hypertension, AF, and their cardiovascular sequelae; simultaneous screening for hypertension and AF; and the prevention of AF through antihypertensive therapy. Hypertension and AF are inextricably connected. Both are easily diagnosed, often silent, and frequently treated inadequately. Together, they additively increase the risk of ischemic stroke, heart failure, and many types of dementia, resulting in greater all-cause mortality, considerable disease burden, and increased health care expenditures. Automated upper arm cuff blood pressure devices with implemented technology can be used to simultaneously detect both hypertension and AF. However, positive screening for AF with an oscillometric blood pressure monitor still requires ECG confirmation. The current evidence suggests that high-risk individuals aged ≥65 years or with treatment-resistant hypertension could benefit from AF screening. Since antihypertensive therapy effectively lowers AF risk, particularly in individuals with left ventricular dysfunction, hypertension should be the key target for AF prediction and prevention rather than merely a comorbidity of AF. Nevertheless, several important gaps in knowledge need to be filled over the next years, including the ideal method and selection of patients for simultaneous screening of hypertension and AF and the optimal antihypertensive drug class and blood pressure targets for AF prevention.
Full Text
https://www.ahajournals.org/doi/10.1161/CIRCULATIONAHA.124.071047
DOI
10.1161/CIRCULATIONAHA.124.071047
Appears in Collections:
1. College of Medicine (의과대학) > Dept. of Internal Medicine (내과학교실) > 1. Journal Papers
Yonsei Authors
Joung, Bo Young(정보영) ORCID logo https://orcid.org/0000-0001-9036-7225
URI
https://ir.ymlib.yonsei.ac.kr/handle/22282913/206136
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