Antithrombotic therapy in atrial fibrillation: aspirin is rarely the right choice.

Ian N. Sabir, Gareth D.K. Matthews, Christopher L.H. Huang

Research output: Contribution to journalReview articlepeer-review

9 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

Atrial fibrillation, the commonest cardiac arrhythmia, predisposes to thrombus formation and consequently increases risk of ischaemic stroke. Recent years have seen approval of a number of novel oral anticoagulants. Nevertheless, warfarin and aspirin remain the mainstays of therapy. It is widely appreciated that both these agents increase the likelihood of bleeding: there is a popular conception that this risk is greater with warfarin. In fact, well-managed warfarin therapy (INR 2-3) has little effect on bleeding risk and is twice as effective as aspirin at preventing stroke. Patients with atrial fibrillation and a further risk factor for stroke (CHA2DS2-VASc >0) should therefore either receive warfarin or a novel oral agent. The remainder who are at the very lowest risk of stroke are better not prescribed antithrombotic therapy. For stroke prevention in atrial fibrillation; aspirin is rarely the right choice.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)346-351
Number of pages6
JournalPostgraduate Medical Journal
Volume89
Issue number1052
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Jun 2013

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