Abstract
Introduction: Early anticoagulation after acute ischemic stroke is usually avoided due to the risk of hemorrhagic transformation (HT). We aimed to assess the rate of radiological HT associated with direct oral anticoagulant (DOAC) initiation within 48 hours vs. > 48 hours in the post-stroke period. Methods: A pooled analysis of five studies of DOAC initiation within 14 days of ischemic stroke onset was conducted. The primary endpoint was incident radiographic HT on follow-up imaging. Secondary endpoints included symptomatic HT, new parenchymal hemorrhage (PH1 or asymptomatic PH2), recurrent systemic events, systemic hemorrhagic complications, mortality within the study period, final modified Rankin Scale score. The results were reported as odds ratio (OR) with 95% confidence interval (CI). Results: A total of 468 patients were enrolled. Median infarct volume was 1.35 (0-7.5) ml, and National Institutes of Health Stroke Scale was 1 (0-3). Incident radiographic HT was seen on follow-up scan in 29 patients. DOAC initiation within 48 hours from index event onset was not associated with incident HT (adjusted OR 0.67, [0.31 - 1.50] P =0.34). No patients developed symptomatic HT. Conversely, 25 patients developed recurrent ischemic events, 64% of which occurred within 14 days. Initiating DOAC within 48 hours of onset was not associated with a reduction in the risk of recurrent ischemic events (OR 0.47, [0.19 - 1.20] P =0.12). In contrast to HT, recurrent ischemic events were associated with poor functional outcomes (OR=6.8, [2.95 - 15.63], p<0.0001). Conclusions: Early DOAC initiation after stroke was not associated with increased incident HT risk. Recurrent ischemic events were common and associated with poor outcomes. These data may be useful for estimating outcome rates and sample size calculations in future trials of early versus late DOAC initiation after AF-related stroke.
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