Background: Paroxysmal supraventricular tachycardia (PSVT) encompasses a range of heart rhythm disorders leading to rapid heart rates. By virtue of its episodic nature, diagnosing PSVT is difficult and estimating incidence and prevalence on a population level is challenging. The objective of this study was to estimate the incidence and prevalence of PSVT in the United States (US) in contemporary practice.
Methods and results: An observational retrospective longitudinal study using claims, enrollment, and demographic data from the IBM MarketScan® Commercial Research database (age < 65) and the Medicare Limited Data Set (age ≥ 65) from 2008 to 2016. Patients with a PSVT diagnosis code (ICD-9: 427.0; ICD-10: I47.1) on ≥2 outpatient, ≥1 emergency room, or ≥1 inpatient visit were considered as having PSVT. Patients with atrial fibrillation/atrial flutter (AF/AFL) were excluded from the initial analysis given the potential for misclassification. Incidence was estimated by assessing diagnoses made during year 5 of continuous enrollment. Finally, a sensitivity analysis was performed by including patients with both PSVT and AF/AFL diagnoses. Period prevalence and incidence rate were estimated to be 332.9 (323.2-342.9) and 57.8 (52.8-63.3) per 100 000 individuals, respectively, when excluding patients with AF/AFL. Projected to the 2018 US Census, prevalence and incidence are 1.26 million (1.21-1.30 million) and 188,981 (172,891-206,943), respectively. Including patients with AF/AFL, the prevalence may increase to 479.7 (467.9-491.8) with an incidence of 93.4 (86.9-100.5) per 100 000 individuals or a prevalence of 2.06 million (2.01-2.12 million).
Conclusions: Approximately 1 in 300 people in the US had PSVT with the highest rates in older and female patients.
Keywords: atrial fibrillation; atrial flutter; incidence; paroxysmal supraventricular tachycardia; prevalence.
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