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Participant Engagement and Preference Study for Clinical Outcomes Associated With Atrial Fibrillation: The PEARL-AF Study.

Publication ,  Journal Article
Reed, SD; Harrington, JL; Morin, DP; Saba, SF; Montgomery, JA; Harrison, RW; Frisch, DR; Viethen, T; Tamm, M; Xiao, J; Mundl, H; Yang, J-C ...
Published in: JACC Adv
December 2024

BACKGROUND: Quantifying patients' preferences for health outcomes associated with atrial fibrillation (AF) and its treatments offers a replicable approach to considering the patient perspective in regulatory decision-making. OBJECTIVE: The authors conducted a preference survey to estimate the relative importance of AF-related events for use in clinical trial analyses to estimate net health benefits with anticoagulants. METHODS: The survey included nontechnical descriptions of three severities of stroke, systemic embolism, myocardial infarction (MI) with or without subsequent heart failure (HF), major bleeding, clinically relevant nonmajor bleeding, and death. A best-worst scaling question format was used in which patients were shown 10 sets of four events and asked to select what they considered to be most and least serious. RESULTS: One thousand twenty-eight patients, mean age 69.2 years, 40.4% female, completed the survey. Best-worst scaling importance weights were significantly different across all events except between major bleeding and MI with HF. Death was considered the most serious (reweighted to 1), followed by severe disabling stroke (0.83), then major bleeding (0.53) or MI with HF (0.50), moderate-severity stroke (0.28) and systemic embolism (0.13). Clinically relevant nonmajor bleeding, MI without HF, and minor stroke (0.10, 0.06, and 0.04, respectively) were considered least serious. Events ordered by importance were consistent across age, sex, and race, but relative weights across events varied by sex and race. CONCLUSIONS: Patients expressed relatively high levels of concern about major bleeding compared to moderate-severity stroke or systemic embolism, endpoints frequently used in AF trials. Estimated weights could be used in patient-centered net-benefit determinations for AF therapies.

Duke Scholars

Published In

JACC Adv

DOI

EISSN

2772-963X

Publication Date

December 2024

Volume

3

Issue

12

Start / End Page

101370

Location

United States
 

Citation

APA
Chicago
ICMJE
MLA
NLM
Reed, S. D., Harrington, J. L., Morin, D. P., Saba, S. F., Montgomery, J. A., Harrison, R. W., … Patel, M. R. (2024). Participant Engagement and Preference Study for Clinical Outcomes Associated With Atrial Fibrillation: The PEARL-AF Study. JACC Adv, 3(12), 101370. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jacadv.2024.101370
Reed, Shelby D., Josephine L. Harrington, Daniel P. Morin, Samir F. Saba, Jay Alan Montgomery, Robert W. Harrison, Daniel R. Frisch, et al. “Participant Engagement and Preference Study for Clinical Outcomes Associated With Atrial Fibrillation: The PEARL-AF Study.JACC Adv 3, no. 12 (December 2024): 101370. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jacadv.2024.101370.
Reed SD, Harrington JL, Morin DP, Saba SF, Montgomery JA, Harrison RW, et al. Participant Engagement and Preference Study for Clinical Outcomes Associated With Atrial Fibrillation: The PEARL-AF Study. JACC Adv. 2024 Dec;3(12):101370.
Reed, Shelby D., et al. “Participant Engagement and Preference Study for Clinical Outcomes Associated With Atrial Fibrillation: The PEARL-AF Study.JACC Adv, vol. 3, no. 12, Dec. 2024, p. 101370. Pubmed, doi:10.1016/j.jacadv.2024.101370.
Reed SD, Harrington JL, Morin DP, Saba SF, Montgomery JA, Harrison RW, Frisch DR, Viethen T, Tamm M, Xiao J, Mundl H, Coppolecchia R, Yang J-C, Wallace MJ, Gonzalez JM, Patel MR. Participant Engagement and Preference Study for Clinical Outcomes Associated With Atrial Fibrillation: The PEARL-AF Study. JACC Adv. 2024 Dec;3(12):101370.

Published In

JACC Adv

DOI

EISSN

2772-963X

Publication Date

December 2024

Volume

3

Issue

12

Start / End Page

101370

Location

United States