Real-world utilization of the pill-in-the-pocket method for terminating episodes of atrial fibrillation: data from the multinational Antiarrhythmic Interventions for Managing Atrial Fibrillation (AIM-AF) survey

EP Europace Journal

24 June 2023
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ESC Journals

Abstract

AbstractAims

Atrial fibrillation (AF) is the most common sustained arrhythmia encountered in clinical practice. Episodes may stop spontaneously (paroxysmal AF); may terminate only via intervention (persistent AF); or may persist indefinitely (permanent AF) (see European and American guidelines, referenced below, for more precise definitions). Recently, there has been renewed interest in an approach to terminate AF acutely referred to as ‘pill-in-the-pocket’ (PITP). The PITP is recognized in both the US and European guidelines as an effective option using an oral antiarrhythmic drug for acute conversion of acute/recent-onset AF. However, how PITP is currently used has not been systematically evaluated.

Methods and results

The recently published Antiarrhythmic Interventions for Managing Atrial Fibrillation (AIM-AF) survey included questions regarding current PITP usage, stratified by US vs. European countries surveyed, by representative countries within Europe, and by cardiologists vs. electrophysiologists. This manuscript presents the data from this planned sub-study. Our survey revealed that clinicians in both the USA and Europe consider PITP in about a quarter of their patients, mostly for recent-onset AF with minimal or no structural heart disease (guideline appropriate). However, significant deviations exist. See the Graphical abstract for a summary of the data.

Conclusion

Our findings highlight the frequent use of PITP and the need for further physician education about appropriate and optimal use of this strategy.

Contributors

James A Reiffel
James A Reiffel

Author

Columbia University Medical Centre New York , United States of America

Carina Blomström-Lundqvist
Carina Blomström-Lundqvist

Author

Orebro University Hospital Orebro , Sweden

Giuseppe Boriani
Giuseppe Boriani

Author

Modena Polyclinic Modena University Hospital Modena , Italy

Jose L Merino
Jose L Merino

Author

La Paz University Hospital Madrid , Spain

A John Camm
A John Camm

Author

City St George's University of London London , United Kingdom of Great Britain & Northern Ireland

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