Atrial fibrillation in UK South Asian hospitalized ischemic stroke patients: The BRAINS study

Taylor Aurelius(Royal Holloway University of London), Gie Ken‐Dror(Royal Holloway University of London), Sapna Sharma(Royal Holloway University of London), Sageet Amlani(Royal London Hospital), Gunaratnam Gunathilagan(Queen Elizabeth the Queen Mother Hospital), David Cohen(Northwick Park Hospital), Chakravarthi Rajkumar(Brighton and Sussex Medical School), Stuart Maguire(Bradford Teaching Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust), Sissi Ispoglou(Birmingham City Hospital), Ibrahim Balogun(William Harvey Hospital), Anthea Parry(Hillingdon Hospital), Lakshmanan Sekaran(Luton and Dunstable Hospital), Hafiz Syed(Newham University Hospital), Enas Lawrence(Croydon University Hospital), Ravneeta Singh(West Middlesex University Hospital), Ahamad Hassan(Leeds General Infirmary), Chris Wharton(New Cross Hospital), Khalid Javaid(Walsall Manor Hospital), Neetish Goorah(University of Ulster), Peter Carr(Heartlands Hospital), Eman Abdus Sami(Airedale General Hospital), Pankaj Sharma(Imperial College Healthcare NHS Trust)
PLoS ONE
February 7, 2023
Cited by 2Open Access
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Abstract

INTRODUCTION: South Asian diaspora comprise one of the largest ethnic minority groups in the world yet data about atrial fibrillation (AF) in this demographic is understudied. Our aim is to identify differences in AF prevalence and treatment between South Asians and white British stroke patients. METHOD: The UK arm of a prospective ongoing large international repository on stroke was analysed. Ethnic differences in AF prevalence and management in those with ischemic stroke were analysed. RESULTS: Of the 3515 individuals recruited with ischemic stroke, 1482 (men: 972, women: 510) were South Asian and 2033 (men:1141, women:892) of white British ethnicity. AF was present in 462 white British and 193 South Asians stroke patients, with South Asians displaying a lower prevalence of AF (South Asians: 13.0% vs white British 22.7%, P<0.001). Despite adjustment for traditional AF risk factors, South Asians had a significantly lower OR of AF compared to white British stroke patients (OR: 0.40, 95%CI: 0.33:0.49, P<0.001). Among confirmed AF cases, 31.8% of South Asians and 41.4% of white British were untreated at admission (P = 0.02). Antiplatelet treatment was significantly higher among South Asians at both admission (South Asian: 47.4% vs. white British: 29.9%, P<0.001) and discharge (South Asian: 49.5% vs. white British: 34.7%, P = 0.001), although anticoagulation treatment was similar across both ethnic groups at admission (South Asian: 28.5% vs white British: 28.1%, P = 0.93), and discharge (South Asian: 45.1% vs white British: 43.1%, P = 0.64). CONCLUSION: Stroke patients of South Asian descent are at significantly lower risk of AF but more likely to be on antiplatelet treatment compared to their white British counterparts.


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