Oral Anticoagulant Use in Patients With Atrial Fibrillation and Chronic Kidney Disease: A Review of the Evidence With Recommendations for Australian Clinical Practice
Chronic kidney disease is common in patients with atrial fibrillation (AF) and is associated with heightened risks of stroke/systemic embolisation and bleeding. In this review we outline the evidence for AF stroke prevention in kidney disease, identify current knowledge gaps, and give recommendations for anticoagulation at various stages of chronic kidney disease.Overall, anticoagulation is underused. Warfarin use becomes increasingly difficult with advancing kidney disease, with difficulty maintaining international normalised ratio (INR) in therapeutic range, increased risk of intracranial and fatal bleeding compared to non-vitamin K oral anticoagulants (NOACs), and high rates of discontinuation.
Source: Heart, Lung and Circulation - Category: Cardiology Authors: Christopher Hammett, Sunil V. Badve, Peter G. Kerr, Huyen A. Tran, Benjamin K. Dundon, Sidney Lo, Andrew Wong, Joanne E. Joseph, Jenny Deague, Vlado Perkovic Tags: Review Source Type: research
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