1. Early anticoagulation in patients with stroke and atrial fibrillation is associated with fewer ischaemic lesions at 1 month: the ATTUNE study
- Author
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Angelos Sharobeam, Longting Lin, Christina Lam, Carlos Garcia-Esperon, Yash Gawarikar, Ronak Patel, Matthew Lee-Archer, Andrew Wong, Michael Roizman, Amanda Gilligan, Andrew Lee, Kee Meng Tan, Susan Day, Christopher Levi, Stephen M Davis, Mark Parsons, and Bernard Yan
- Subjects
Neurology (clinical) ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine - Abstract
BackgroundThe optimal time to commence anticoagulation in patients with atrial fibrillation (AF) after ischaemic stroke or transient ischaemic attack (TIA) is unclear, with guidelines differing in recommendations. A limitation of previous studies is the focus on clinically overt stroke, rather than radiologically obvious diffusion-weighted imaging ischaemic lesions. We aimed to quantify silent ischaemic lesions and haemorrhages on MRI at 1 month in patients commenced on early (MethodsA prospective multicentre, observational cohort study was performed at 11 Australian stroke centres. Clinical and MRI data were collected at baseline and follow-up, with blinded imaging assessment performed by two authors. Timing of commencement of anticoagulation was at the discretion of the treating stroke physician.ResultsWe recruited 276 patients of whom 208 met the eligibility criteria. The average age was 74.2 years (SD±10.63), and 79 (38%) patients were female. Median National Institute of Health Stroke Scale score was 5 (IQR 1–12). Median baseline ischaemic lesion volume was 5 mL (IQR 2–17). There were a greater number of new ischaemic lesions on follow-up MRI in patients commenced on anticoagulation ≥4 days after index event (17% vs 8%, p=0.04), but no difference in haemorrhage rates (22% vs 32%, p=0.10). Baseline ischaemic lesion volume of ≤5 mL was less likely to have a new haemorrhage at 1 month (p=0.02). There was no difference in haemorrhage rates in patients with an initial ischaemic lesion volume of >5 mL, regardless of anticoagulation timing.ConclusionCommencing anticoagulation
- Published
- 2023
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