Abstract

The use of antiplatelet drugs is thought to increase the risk for intracerebral hemorrhage (ICH) in patients with cerebral microbleeds (CMBs). However, hemodialysis (HD) patients have a high prevalence of CMBs and diverse pathologies that require antiplatelet therapy. In this study, we investigated whether the use of antiplatelet drugs increases the risk for ICH in HD patients with CMBs. Brain magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), including T2*-weighted MRI, was performed in 179 HD patients with no history of cerebrovascular events. CMBs were detected and patients were followed prospectively with a median follow-up period of 5.2 [1.4–6.2] years. To investigate whether the influence of antiplatelet therapy on the development of ICH differs in cases with and without CMBs, the inverse probability of treatment weighting method was used, including an interaction term between the presence or absence of CMBs and use of antiplatelet drugs. As a result, CMBs were detected in 45 patients (25.1%), and antiplatelet drugs were used in 66 patients (36.9%). When the effect of antiplatelet therapy on the incidence of ICH was modified by the presence of CMBs at baseline (P for interaction <0.001), the use of antiplatelet drugs was a significant risk factor for ICH in HD patients without CMBs, but not in HD patients with CMBs. Furthermore, the burden of CMBs significantly increased the risk for ICH, but the increase in this risk was slower in antiplatelet drug users as compared to non-antiplatelet drug users (P for interaction = 0.02). The influence of antiplatelet drugs on the development of ICH differed depending on the presence or absence of CMBs. In fact, the use of antiplatelet drugs did not increase the risk for ICH in HD patients with CMBs.

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