Anticoagulation in atrial fibrillation and liver disease: a pooled-analysis of >20 000 patients
European Heart Journal - Cardiovascular Pharmacotherapy

Abstract
Anticoagulation for atrial fibrillation patients with liver disease represents a clinical dilemma. We sought to evaluate the efficacy/safety of different anticoagulation, i.e. vitamin K antagonist (VKA) and non-VKA oral anticoagulants (NOACs) in such patient group.
This was a pooled-analysis enrolling up-to-date clinical data. Two subsets: subset A (VKA vs. Non-Anticoagulation) and subset B (NOACs vs. VKA) were pre-specified. The study outcomes were ischaemic stroke (IS)/thromboembolism (TE), major bleeding (MB), intracranial bleeding (ICB), gastrointestinal bleeding (GIB), and all-cause mortality. A total of 20 042 patients’ data were analysed (subset A:
VKA appears to reduce the risk of IS/TE but increase all-bleeding events. NOACs have similar effect in reducing the risk of IS/TE and have significantly lower risk of MB and ICB as compared with VKA. NOACs seem to be associated with better clinical outcome than VKA in patients with mild–moderate liver disease.
Contributors

Helmut Pürerfellner
Author

Christian Meyer
Author

Philipp Sommer
Author

Márcio Galindo Kiuchi
Author

Martin Martinek
Author

Piotr Futyma
Author

Simone Zanchi
Author

Lin Zhu
Author

Alexandra Schratter
Author

Jiazhi Wang
Author

Willem-Jan Acou
Author

Shaowen Liu
Author

Zhiyu Ling
Author

Yuehui Yin
Author

Feifan Ouyang
Author

Julian K R Chun
Author

Boris Schmidt
Author

