- Kaufman, Brystana G;
- Kim, Sunghee;
- Pieper, Karen;
- Allen, Larry A;
- Gersh, Bernard J;
- Naccarelli, Gerald V;
- Ezekowitz, Michael D;
- Fonarow, Gregg C;
- Mahaffey, Kenneth W;
- Singer, Daniel E;
- Chan, Paul S;
- Freeman, James V;
- Ansell, Jack;
- Kowey, Peter R;
- Rieffel, James A;
- Piccini, Jonathan;
- Peterson, Eric;
- O'Brien, Emily C
Objective
To describe self-reported disease understanding for newly diagnosed patients with atrial fibrillation (AF) and assess (1) how disease understanding changes over the first 6 months after diagnosis and (2) the relationship between patient understanding of therapies at baseline and treatment receipt at 6 months among treatment-naïve patients.Methods
We analysed survey data from SATELLITE (Survey of Patient Knowledge and Personal Priorities for Treatment), a substudy of patients with new-onset AF enrolled in the national Outcomes Registry for Better Informed Treatment of Atrial Fibrillation (ORBIT) II registry across 56 US sites. Patients were surveyed at the baseline and 6-month follow-up clinic visits using Likert scales.Results
Among 1004 baseline survey responses, patients' confidence in their understanding of rhythm control, ablation, anticoagulation and cardioversion was suboptimal, with 'high' understanding ranging from 8.5% for left atrial appendage closure to 71.3% for rhythm therapy. Of medical history and demographic factors, education level was the strongest predictor of reporting 'high' disease understanding. Among the 786 patients with 6-month survey data, significant increases in the proportion reporting high understanding were observed (p<0.05) only for warfarin and direct oral anticoagulants (DOACs). With the exception of ablation, high understanding for a given therapeutic option was not associated with increased use of that therapy at 6 months.Conclusions
About half of patients with new-onset AF understood the benefits of oral anticoagulant at the time of diagnosis and understanding improved over the first 6 months. However, understanding of AF treatment remains suboptimal at 6 months. Our results suggest a need for ongoing patient education.Clinical trial registration
Clinicaltrials.gov. Identifier: NCT01701817.