Abstract

ObjectivesTo investigate the oral anticoagulants (OACs) use after acute ischemic stroke (AIS) and prognosis of patients with atrial fibrillation (AF). MethodsThis was a real-world follow-up research of AIS patients with AF admitted to 5 hospitals in northwestern China. We visited these individuals every 6 months to check the type, dosage of OACs, and to record IS recurrence, bleeding, and death events and modified Rankin Scale (mRS) scores until December 2022. When one of the following occurring first was endpoint: IS recurrence, death or study end. Patients were divided into continuous anticoagulation group and non-continuous anticoagulation group based on whether they continued to take OACs from the moment they were discharged until the endpoint. We further analyzed the association between anticoagulation persistence and outcomes. ResultsAmong all 250 patients with OACs indication, 147 patients (58.8 %) received OACs at discharge. Only 37.9 % of patients (39/103) started OACs after discharge. Of the 147 patients treated with OACs, 21.8 % (32/147) discontinued anticoagulation after discharge. 239 of the 250 patients had completed the median 40-month follow-up with 91 patients in continuous anticoagulation group and 148 patients in non-continuous anticoagulation group. In the multivariate COX regression, non-continuous anticoagulation was an independent risk factor for poor prognosis (mRS>2) in AIS patients with AF (1.452[1.011, 2.086], p = 0.043). ConclusionsThis study revealed an upward trend in the use rate of OACs, but low OACs rates that meet guideline-based criteria and low anticoagulation persistence in AF patients after AIS in the northwestern China. Discontinuous anticoagulation was associated with an increased risk of poor prognosis in these patients.

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