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. Author manuscript; available in PMC: 2021 Feb 20.
Published in final edited form as: J Cardiovasc Electrophysiol. 2019 Sep 25;30(11):2508–2515. doi: 10.1111/jce.14176

TABLE 1.

Characteristics of elderly adults with atrial fibrillation according to perceived anticoagulation burden

Characteristics High burdena (n = 254) Low burden (n = 783) P
Age   74 (7)   76 (7) <.01

Female 145 (57) 369 (47)   .01

White 210 (83) 673 (86)   .2

Married or living as married 136 (54) 441 (56)   .64

Education   .36
 High school/some college 147 (58) 453 (58)
 College graduate   43 (17) 112 (14)
 Graduate degree or above   60 (24) 213 (27)

Annual income (in dollars)   .06
 <10 000   16 (8)   29 (4)
 10 000-49 999 102 (50) 301 (45)
 50 000-99 999   54 (26) 218 (33)
 ≥100 000-149 999   31 (15) 119 (18)

Insurance   .05
 Commercial/HMO/PPO   39 (15) 142 (18)
 Medicare 191 (75) 561 (72)

Atrial fibrillation type   .99
 Paroxysmal 142 (56) 439 (56)
 Persistent   70 (28) 220 (28)
 Permanent   17 (7)   51 (7)

CHADSVASC score   4.6 (1.6)   4.5 (1.6)   .24

HAS-BLED score   2.9 (1.0)   2.9 (1.0)   .52

Medical History
 Heart failure 114 (45) 288 (37)   .02
 Myocardial infarction   42 (17) 165 (21)   .11
 Hypertension 233 (92) 708 (90)   .53
 Diabetes   73 (29) 228 (29)   .91
 Stroke   25 (10)   82 (10)   .77
 Alcohol use   76 (30) 248 (32)   .6
 Anemia   95 (37) 233 (30)   .02
 Asthma/chronic obstructive lung disease   81 (32) 182 (23)   .006
 Renal disease   79 (31) 225 (29)   .47
 Implantable cardiac device 105 (41) 249 (32)   .005

Anticoagulant type <.0001
 Warfarin 180 (71) 412 (53)
 Direct oral anticoagulant   74 (29) 371 (47)

Abbreviations: HMO, health maintenance organization; PPO, preferred provider organization.

a

High burden was defined as being the bottom quartile of the reversed anticlot treatment burden scale. Data were presented as n (%), mean (standard deviation).