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Bleeding risk comparison between direct oral anticoagulants at doses approved for atrial fibrillation and aspirin: systematic review, meta-analysis and meta-regression

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Auteur
Sagris D., Leventis I., Georgiopoulos G., Korompoki E., Makaritsis K., Vemmos K., Milionis H., Lip G.Y.H., Ntaios G.
Date
2020
Language
en
DOI
10.1016/j.ejim.2020.05.001
Sujet
acetylsalicylic acid
anticoagulant agent
apixaban
dabigatran
rivaroxaban
acetylsalicylic acid
anticoagulant agent
arterial thromboembolism
Article
atrial fibrillation
bleeding
brain hemorrhage
follow up
gastrointestinal hemorrhage
high risk patient
human
meta analysis
outcome assessment
systematic review
venous thromboembolism
atrial fibrillation
cerebrovascular accident
oral drug administration
venous thromboembolism
Administration, Oral
Anticoagulants
Aspirin
Atrial Fibrillation
Humans
Stroke
Venous Thromboembolism
Elsevier B.V.
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Résumé
Background: A considerable proportion of patients with atrial fibrillation (AF) are still treated with aspirin despite current guidelines due to presumed favorable safety. Aim: We performed a systematic review and meta-analysis of bleeding outcomes in randomized controlled trials (RCTs) comparing direct oral anticoagulants (DOACs) at doses approved for AF vs. aspirin. Methods: We searched PubMed and Scopus for phase-III RCTs of DOACs at AF-approved doses vs. aspirin. Outcomes assessed were major-, intracranial-, gastrointestinal-, clinically-relevant-non-major- and fatal bleeding. We performed two subgroup analyses: one per patient population i.e. those at high risk of arterial or venous thromboembolism, and one per DOAC. We also performed a meta-regression to assess the association with patient age. Results: In 4 eligible trials (20,440 patients) comparing DOACs vs. aspirin, the ORs were: 1.52 (95%CI: 0.91–2.53) for major bleeding in patients at high risk of arterial thromboembolism and 1.55 (95%CI:0.99-2.45, relative-risk-increase:55%, absolute-risk-increase:0.6%, number-needed-to-harm:170) in the overall analysis; 1.39 (95%CI:0.62–3.14) for intracranial bleeding in patients at high risk of arterial thromboembolism which was similar for the overall analysis; 1.27 (95%CI: 0.84–1.92) for gastrointestinal bleeding in patients at high risk of arterial thromboembolism and 1.26 (95%CI:0.86-1.85) in the overall analysis. Patient age was not a predictor of the magnitude of ORs for all bleeding outcomes. Conclusion: The present meta-analysis does not support the use of aspirin over DOACs in AF. Accordingly, the level of evidence of the related recommendations should be upgraded, which in turn may reduce further the proportion of AF patients treated with antiplatelets. © 2020 European Federation of Internal Medicine
URI
http://hdl.handle.net/11615/78661
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