Title Atrial cardiomyopathy: From healthy atria to atrial failure. A clinical consensus statement of the Heart Failure Association of the ESC
Authors Weerts, Jerremy ; Țica, Otilia ; Aranyo, Julia ; Basile, Christian ; Borizanova-Petkova, Angelina ; Borovac, Josip Andjelo ; Camilli, Massimiliano ; Eichenlaub, Martin ; Fiori, Emiliano ; Van Loon, Tim ; Withaar, Coenraad ; Zakarkaitė, Diana ; Zink, Matthias D ; Adamo, Marianna ; Aimo, Alberto ; Arbelo, Elena ; Bisbal Van Bylen, Felipe ; Farmakis, Dimitrios T ; Dobrev, Dobromir ; Čelutkienė, Jelena ; Böhm, Michael ; Coats, Andrew ; Metra, Marco ; Rosano, Giuseppe ; Ruschitzka, Frank ; Bayes-Genis, Antoni ; Kotecha, Dipak
DOI 10.1002/ejhf.3782
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Is Part of European journal of heart failure.. John Wiley and Sons Ltd. 2025, Early Access, p. [1-22].. ISSN 1388-9842. eISSN 1879-0844
Keywords [eng] atrial cardiomyopathy ; atrial fibrillation ; atrial fibrosis ; electrocardiography ; heart failure ; imaging
Abstract [eng] The importance of atrial cardiomyopathy (AtCM) as a specific clinical entity is increasingly recognized. Past definitions have varied, and the lack of consistent cut-offs for imaging parameters and biomarkers have limited clinical utility to diagnose and track AtCM progression. While research has mainly focused on AtCM in the context of atrial fibrillation, emerging evidence underscores its relevance in remodelling and development of heart failure. The aim of this consensus document was to provide a contemporary framework for AtCM, evolve the definitions of AtCM and atrial failure for more widespread clinical use, and help to direct emerging research and future clinical trials. Supporting the work of early career researchers, this consensus document evaluates diagnostic markers and summarizes the underpinning mechanisms, clinical characteristics and prognostic impact of AtCM. Our objective was to bring together new translational scientific progress, catalyse future research and enable clinical application to facilitate better management, for example in patient groups where aggressive control of risk factors or comorbidities could prevent AtCM progression. We redefined AtCM as a graded disorder that includes electrical dysfunction of the atria along with evidence of either mechanical atrial dysfunction, atrial enlargement and/or atrial fibrosis. Atrial failure is the end-stage manifestation of AtCM, characterized by progressive structural, electrophysiological and functional changes. Earlier identification, risk stratification and ongoing research into therapeutic options have the potential to prevent the clinical consequences of AtCM and atrial failure, including adverse patient outcomes and poor quality of life associated with atrial fibrillation and heart failure.
Published John Wiley and Sons Ltd
Type Journal article
Language English
Publication date 2025
CC license CC license description