Regulatory

Heart Rhythm Society Releases Guidelines for Creating AF Centers of Excellence

The new framework outlines requirements for becoming an Afib CoE and describes the expectations for maintaining this status.

By: Michael Barbella

Managing Editor

Photo: sfam_photo/Shutterstock.

The Heart Rhythm Society (HRS) today released a framework outlining the criteria for establishing an Atrial Fibrillation (AF) Center of Excellence (CoE) and key operational standards to provide multidisciplinary care for AF patients.

The most common arrhythmia disorder, AF is becoming more prevalent across the United States, affecting an estimated 10.5 million adults.As the prevalence of AF continues to grow, so does the complexity of managing this disease. Providing high-quality care for AF demands a specialized center for early diagnosis and prompt multidisciplinary treatment to reduce the risks of stroke, heart failure, and mortality, ensuring patients receive appropriate interventions to restore normal heart rhythm while addressing underlying risk factors.

HRS has previously released a position paper announcing the rationale for creating integrated, highly functioning AF CoEs. This new framework, developed in collaboration with experts from 19 international institutions, outlines the requirements for becoming an AF CoE and describes the expectations for maintaining this status to ensure exceptional patient care. These centers will serve as specialized hubs to improve patient outcomes, streamline care coordination, and enhance the quality of life for AF patients.

“Optimal, coordinated care for atrial fibrillation is best delivered at Centers of Excellence, where comprehensive education, resources, and data-driven approaches ensure the highest standard of treatment,” said T. Jared Bunch, M.D., chair of the AF Centers of Excellence Task Force. “HRS believes that all healthcare facilities, whether academic or non-academic, urban or rural, can achieve excellence in atrial fibrillation care by following fundamental principles and collaborating across health systems when needed.”

The framework offers a blueprint and checklist for establishing an AF CoE, outlining five key pillars:

  • Early patient identification and access
  • Evidence-based care pathways
  • Optimization of electrophysiology (EP) procedures
  • Outcomes reporting
  • Comprehensive education

To facilitate adoption and scalability, the AF CoE concept incorporates a Tiers for Accountability model, allowing centers to assess their progress from foundational to comprehensive levels of performance.

Not all institutions have facilities that can provide the full spectrum of services required to care for AF patients, so this framework also introduces the concept of AF Cooperatives—formalized partnerships between institutions designed to ensure access to specialized care.

The full document was published today in the online edition of Heart Rhythm, the Heart Rhythm Society’s official journal.

The Heart Rhythm Society is the international leader in science, education, and advocacy for cardiac arrhythmia professionals and patients and is the primary information resource on heart rhythm disorders. It aims to improve patient care by promoting research, education, and optimal healthcare policies and standards. Incorporated in 1979 and based in Washington, D.C., it has a membership of more than 9,000 heart rhythm professionals from 94 countries.

Reference
i Noubiap JJ, Tang JJ, Teraoka JT, Dewland TA, Marcus GM. Minimum national prevalence of diagnosed atrial fibrillation inferred from California acute care facilities. Journal of the American College of Cardiology. 2024; 84(16): 1501-8.

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