International Journal of Cardiology: Heart & Vasculature (Aug 2024)
Association between obesity and statin use on mortality and hospital encounters in atrial fibrillation
Abstract
Background: Obesity increases risk of atrial fibrillation (AF) at least in part due to pro-inflammatory effects, but has been paradoxically associated with improved mortality. Although statins have pleiotropic anti-inflammatory properties, their interaction with obesity and clinical outcomes in AF is unknown. We explored the relationship between BMI, statin use, and all-cause mortality and AF/congestive heart failure (CHF)-related encounters, hypothesizing that statin exposure may be differentially associated with improved outcomes in overweight/obesity. Methods: This was a single center retrospective cohort study of adults with AF diagnosed between 2011–2018. Patients were grouped by body mass index (BMI) and statin use at time of AF diagnosis. Outcomes included all-cause mortality and ED or inpatient encounters for AF or CHF. Results and Conclusions: A total of 2503 subjects were included (median age 66 years, 43.4 % female, median BMI 29.8 kg/m2, 54.6 % on baseline statin therapy). Increasing BMI was associated with decreased mortality hazard but not associated with AF/CHF encounter risk. Adjusting for statin-BMI interaction, demographics, and cardiovascular comorbidities, overweight non-statin users experienced improved mortality (adjusted hazard ratio [aHR] 0.55, 95 % CI 0.35–0.84) compared to statin users (aHR 0.98, 95 % CI 0.69–1.40; interaction P-value = 0.013). Mortality hazard was consistently lower in obese non-statin users than in statin users, however interaction was insignificant. No significant BMI-statin interactions were observed in AF/CHF encounter risk. In summary, statin use was not differentially associated with improved mortality or hospitalization risk in overweight/obese groups. These findings do not support statins for secondary prevention of adverse outcomes based on overweight/obesity status alone.