
Patients with cancer have a more than twofold risk of developing atrial fibrillation (AF) compared with the general population, according to a press release regarding data that will be published by the American College of Cardiology’s Annual Scientific Session. Specifically, AF was associated with prostate (3.60%), lung (2.78%), colon (2.27%), breast (3.31%), pancreatic (0.28%), leukemia (0.98%), non-Hodgkin lymphoma (1.18%), Hodgkin lymphoma (0.1%), and thoracic (0.03%) cancers compared with the general population (P=0.001 for all).
Researchers used data from the National Inpatient Sample for more than 143 million adults who visited a U.S. hospital between 2012 and 2015. In this cohort, 10.2% of patients (approximately 14.5 million people) had AF.