Prevalence of atrial fibrillation in the Italian elderly population and projections from 2020 to 2060 for Italy and the European Union: the FAI Project
Author(s) -
Antonio Di Carlo,
Leonardo Bellino,
Domenico Consoli,
Fabio Mori,
Augusto Zaninelli,
Marzia Baldereschi,
Alessandro Cattarinussi,
Maria Grazia D’Alfonso,
Chiara Gradia,
Bruno Sgherzi,
Giovanni Pracucci,
Benedetta Piccardi,
Biancamaria Polizzi,
Domenico Inzitari,
M L Aliprandi,
E Bonsangue,
P Locatelli,
P Saurgnani,
L G Senziani,
D Tarantini,
Rita Paola Rota,
R Boninsegni,
T Feltrin,
E Lancia,
F Latella,
G Monici,
F Portera,
S Ceccherini,
G Borello,
Andres Delgado Casteleiro y Cristina Contartese,
Antonio D’Amico,
G D’Urzo,
Gaetano Grillo,
F Mellea,
C Ramondino
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
ep europace
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.119
H-Index - 102
eISSN - 1532-2092
pISSN - 1099-5129
DOI - 10.1093/europace/euz141
Subject(s) - european union , atrial fibrillation , european population , population , medicine , population ageing , geography , demography , cardiology , business , international trade , sociology , environmental health
Aims To estimate prevalence of atrial fibrillation (AF) in a representative sample of the Italian elderly population, projecting figures for Italy and the European Union. Methods and results A cross-sectional examination of all subjects aged 65+ years from three general practices in Northern, Central, and Southern Italy started in 2016. Participants were administered a systematic and an opportunistic screening, followed by clinical and electrocardiogram confirmation. The study sample included 6016 subjects. Excluding 235 non-eligible, among the remaining 5781 participation was 78.3%, which left 4528 participants (mean age 74.5 ± 6.8 years, 47.2% men). Prevalence of AF was 7.3% [95% confidence intervals (CI) 6.6–8.1], higher in men and with advancing age (6.6% from systematic plus 0.7% from opportunistic screening). Using prevalence figures, Italian elderly having AF in 2016 were estimated at ∼1 081 000 (95% CI 786 000–1 482 000). Considering stable prevalence, this number will increase by 75% to ∼1 892 000 in 2060 (95% CI 1 378 000–2 579 000). European Union elderly having AF in 2016 were estimated at ∼7 617 000 (95% CI 5 530 000–10 460 000), increasing by 89% to ∼14 401 000 in 2060 (95% CI 10 489 000–19 647 000). In 2016, subjects aged 80+ years represented 53.5% of cases in Italy and 51.2% in the European Union; in 2060, 69.6% and 65.2%, respectively. Conclusions Our findings indicate a high burden of AF in coming decades, especially among the oldest-old, who carry the higher AF-related risk of stroke and medical complications.
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