# Early and Late Postoperative Atrial Fibrillation After Coronary Artery Bypass Grafting and Surgical Aortic Valve Replacement: An Exploratory Study on a Dual-Modality Ambulatory Electrocardiogram Monitoring

**Authors:** Andrzej Kułach, Tomasz Skowerski, Magdalena Piekarska, Michał Majewski, Marek Deja, Wojciech Wańha, Radosław Gocoł, Zbigniew Gąsior, Grzegorz Smolka

PMC · DOI: 10.3390/diagnostics16050670 · Diagnostics · 2026-02-26

## TL;DR

This study finds that many patients develop atrial fibrillation after heart surgery, often beyond 10 days post-discharge, suggesting longer monitoring is needed.

## Contribution

The study introduces a dual-modality ambulatory ECG monitoring strategy to better detect late postoperative atrial fibrillation after cardiac surgery.

## Key findings

- Late postoperative atrial fibrillation (POAF) was detected in 38.2% of patients beyond discharge.
- Monitoring for 30 days, including a 10-day continuous patch-Holter and a patient-activated recorder, improved detection rates.
- Female sex was independently associated with late POAF, and extended monitoring captured most cases beyond day 10.

## Abstract

Background: Postoperative atrial fibrillation (POAF) after cardiac surgery is common and clinically relevant, yet optimal postdischarge ECG surveillance remains undefined. We assessed the incidence of POAF after isolated coronary artery bypass grafting (CABG) and surgical aortic valve replacement (SAVR) using a dual-modality ambulatory strategy. Methods: In an exploratory, single-center study, consecutive adults without pre-operative AF undergoing elective isolated CABG or SAVR received dual-modality monitoring after discharge: continuous patch-Holter for ~10 days and a patient-activated single-lead recorder for up to 30 days. Early POAF was AF/AFl during index hospitalization; late POAF was first AF/AFL detected postdischarge by either modality. Results: Fifty-five patients were enrolled (CABG 30 [54.5%], SAVR 25 [45.5%]; mean age 64.6 ± 9.8 years; 38.2% women). Early POAF occurred in 10/49 (20.4%); late POAF was detected in 21/55 (38.2%). By modality, late AF was identified on the 10-day Holter in 11/51 (21.6%) and on the 30-day recorder in 19/51 (37.3%). Cumulative detection reached 20.0% by day 7, 30.9% by day 10, and 38.2% thereafter, demonstrating that a substantive proportion of late POAF occurred after day 10, and 19/21 (90%) were captured by event monitoring. Female sex was independently associated with late POAF (OR 3.70, 95% CI 1.17–11.72); longer aortic cross-clamp time was related to late POAF in the SAVR subset, while larger LA size was related to POAF incidence in the CABG group. Early (in-hospital) POAF was associated with subsequent late POAF (p = 0.025). The difference in late POAF frequency between CABG and SAVR (33.3% vs. 44.0%; p = 0.42) was not significant. Conclusions: Among patients without prior AF undergoing CABG or SAVR, late POAF is frequent and often manifests beyond 10 days after discharge. Extending ambulatory surveillance to 30 days—or adopting a 10-day continuous plus patient-activated to day 30 hybrid—materially improves case finding and should be considered in routine postoperative pathways.

## Linked entities

- **Diseases:** atrial fibrillation (MONDO:0004981)

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** Atrial Fibrillation (MESH:D001281)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Full text

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## References

17 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12985056/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12985056