Abstract
Background: the primary prevention of ischaemic stroke in chronic non-valvular atrial fibrillation (AF) typically involves consideration of aspirin or warfarin. CHA 2DS 2-VASc estimates annual stroke rates for untreated AF patients, which are reduced by 60% with warfarin and by 20% with aspirin. HAS-BLED estimates annual rates of major bleeding on warfarin. The latter risk with aspirin is 0.5-1.2% per year.Hypothesis: given a 'warfarin, aspirin or no therapy' choice, AF patients will prefer the option that maximises the annual probability of not having a stroke and not having a major bleed.Methods: decision tree applied to the 60 possible combinations of CHA 2DS 2-VASc and HAS-BLED scores.Results: according to the pre-specified hypothesis, when CHA 2DS 2-VASc is <2, the balance of risk and benefit would advise no treatment; when CHA 2DS 2-VASc is 2 or 3, warfarin would be best when HAS-BLED <2, otherwise no treatment would be advised; for CHA 2DS 2-VASc =4, warfarin would be best when HAS-BLED <3, otherwise no treatment would be advised and for CHA 2DS 2-VASc ≥5, warfarin would be the preferred option if HAS-BLED <4, otherwise aspirin would be advised.Conclusion: this theoretical exercise illustrates the potential benefit of decision analysis in an area where high complexity and uncertainty still remain. © The Author 2011. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the British Geriatrics Society. All rights reserved.
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Romero-Ortuno, R., & O’Shea, D. (2012). Aspirin versus warfarin in atrial fibrillation: Decision analysis may help patients’ choice. Age and Ageing, 41(2), 250–254. https://doi.org/10.1093/ageing/afr165
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