Direct oral anticoagulants for stroke prevention in patients with device-detected atrial fibrillation: assessing net clinical benefit

Author:

McIntyre William F1ORCID,Benz Alexander P12ORCID,Tojaga Nedim3,Brandes Axel34ORCID,Lopes Renato D5ORCID,Healey Jeff S1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Population Health Research Institute, McMaster University , 237 Barton St East, Hamilton, Ontario, L8L 2X2 , Canada

2. Department of Cardiology, University Medical Centre Mainz, Johannes Gutenberg-University, Mainz , Germany

3. Department of Cardiology, Esbjerg and Grindsted Hospital—University Hospital of Southern Denmark , Esbjerg , Denmark

4. Department of Regional Health Research, University of Southern Denmark , Esbjerg , Denmark

5. Duke Clinical Research Institute, Duke University School of Medicine , Durham, NC , USA

Abstract

Abstract Subclinical, device-detected atrial fibrillation (AF) is frequently recorded by pacemakers and other implanted cardiac rhythm devices. Patients with device-detected AF have an elevated risk of stroke, but a lower risk of stroke than similar patients with clinical AF captured with surface electrocardiogram. Two randomized clinical trials (NOAH-AFNET 6 and ARTESiA) have tested a direct oral anticoagulant (DOAC) against aspirin or placebo. A study-level meta-analysis of the two trials found that treatment with a DOAC resulted in a 32% reduction in ischaemic stroke and a 62% increase in major bleeding; the results of the two trials were consistent. The annualized rate of stroke in the control arms was ∼1%. Several factors point towards overall net benefit from DOAC treatment for patients with device-detected AF. Strokes in ARTESiA were frequently fatal or disabling and bleeds were rarely lethal. The higher absolute rates of major bleeding compared with ischaemic stroke while on treatment with a DOAC in the two trials are consistent with the ratio of bleeds to strokes seen in the pivotal DOAC vs. warfarin trials in patients with clinical AF. Prior research has concluded that patients place a higher emphasis on stroke prevention than on bleeding. Further research is needed to identify the characteristics that will help identify patients with device-detected AF who will receive the greatest benefit from DOAC treatment.

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

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