Pre-treatment lysis time of plasma-derived fibrin clots and bleeding in patients on oral anticoagulants for atrial fibrillation in the ARISTOTLE trial
European Heart Journal

Abstract
Oral anticoagulation reduces stroke risk in patients with atrial fibrillation (AF) but increases bleeding. Longer fibrin clot lysis time has been shown to predict adverse cardiovascular outcomes in acute coronary syndromes. This study explored relationships between fibrin clot lysis time at randomization and clinical outcomes in patients with AF enrolled in the Apixaban for Reduction in Stroke and Other Thromboembolic Events in AF (ARISTOTLE) trial.
Plasma samples were obtained from anticoagulation-naïve participants, before initiation of study medication (
A shorter lysis time was associated with being older, male, permanent AF, lower body mass index, estimated glomerular filtration rate and C-reactive protein, and higher N-terminal pro-B-type natriuretic peptide. Major and clinically relevant non-major bleeding was significantly more frequent in lysis time Q1 vs. Q4 [6.3%/yr vs. 2.1%/yr; HR, 2.99 (95% CI, 1.75–5.12);
Shorter pre-treatment fibrin clot lysis time independently predicted higher bleeding risk in patients receiving oral anticoagulation for AF.
Contributors

John H Alexander
Author

Renato D Lopes
Author

Christopher B Granger
Author

Elaine M Hylek
Author

Lars Wallentin
Author

Robert F Storey
Author
University of Sheffield Sheffield , United Kingdom of Great Britain & Northern Ireland

William A E Parker
Author

Thomas A Nelson
Author

Justin Lee
Author

Heather M Judge
Author

Ramzi A Ajjan
Author

Johan Westerbergh
Author

Agneta Siegbahn
Author
You may be interested in



