Self-reported physical activity and major adverse events in patients with atrial fibrillation: a report from the EURObservational Research Programme Pilot Survey on Atrial Fibrillation (EORP-AF) General Registry
EP Europace Journal

Abstract
Physical activity is protective against cardiovascular (CV) events, both in general population and in high-risk CV cohorts. However, the relationship between physical activity with major adverse outcomes in atrial fibrillation (AF) is not well-established. Our aim was to analyse this relationship in a ‘real-world’ AF population. Second, we investigated the influence of physical activity on arrhythmia progression.
We studied all patients enrolled in the EURObservational Research Programme on AF (EORP-AF) Pilot Survey. Physical activity was defined as ‘none’, ‘occasional’, ‘regular’, and ‘intense’, based on patient self-reporting. Data on physical activity were available for 2442 patients: 38.9% reported none, 34.7% occasional, 21.7% regular, and 4.7% intense physical activity. Prevalence of the principal CV risk factors progressively decreased from none to intense physical activity. Lower rates of CV death, all-cause death, and composite outcomes were found in AF patients who reported regular and intense physical activity (
Atrial fibrillation patients taking regular exercise were associated with a lower risk of all-cause death, even when we considered various subgroups, including gender, elderly age, symptomatic status, and stroke risk class. Efforts to increase physical activity among AF patients may improve outcomes in these patients.
Contributors

Marco Proietti
Author

Giuseppe Boriani
Author

Cécile Laroche
Author

Igor Diemberger
Author

Mircea I. Popescu
Author

Lars H. Rasmussen
Author

Gianfranco Sinagra
Author

Gheorghe-Andrei Dan
Author

Aldo P. Maggioni
Author

Luigi Tavazzi
Author

Deirdre A. Lane
Author

Gregory Y.H. Lip
Author
