Prevalence of Major Bleeding in Elderly Patients on Oral Anticoagulants for Non-Valvular Atrial Fibrillation: A Single-Center 12-Year Retrospective Review
Research article published in Geriatrics (Basel, Switzerland) (2025)
Abstract
Background/Objectives: Non-valvular atrial fibrillation (NVAF) is a common arrhythmia in the elderly and carries a high risk of cardioembolic stroke. Oral anticoagulation is central to prevention, with direct oral anticoagulants (DOACs) increasingly replacing warfarin due to better safety and convenience. However, major bleeding remains a key concern, particularly in older patients. This study aimed to determine the prevalence of major bleeding among elderly patients (≥65 years) with NVAF treated with oral anticoagulants. Methods: A retrospective cohort study was conducted on 886 elderly NVAF patients managed at a tertiary hospital between January 2012 and December 2023. Data on demographics, anticoagulant type, comorbidities, and bleeding events were collected. Associations between categorical variables were tested using Chi-square or Fisher's exact tests, while logistic regression identified predictors of major bleeding. Results: The mean age was 78.4 ± 7.2 years, with equal gender distribution. Most patients (87.1%) received DOACs, while 12.9% were prescribed warfarin. A total of 63 patients (7.1%) experienced major bleeding, including 51 (6.6%) in the DOAC group and 12 (10.5%) in the warfarin group. Intracranial and intra-/retroperitoneal hemorrhages were most common. Logistic regression showed older age, prior bleeding, a higher HASBLED score, and antiplatelet use as significant predictors. Among patients with a recorded weight (n = 70), dosing adherence was better for apixaban and edoxaban compared to dabigatran and rivaroxaban. Conclusions: DOACs were associated with fewer major bleeding events than warfarin. Bleeding risk was strongly linked to age, prior bleeding, HASBLED score, and concomitant antiplatelet therapy, highlighting the importance of appropriate DOAC dosing for safety.
Abstract sourced from PubMed (NCBI) for the cited record. See the original publication for the authoritative version.
Summary
Peer-reviewed clinical and outcomes research relevant to medicinal leech therapy and its biology. Indexed in PubMed and verified against the NCBI record.
Why This Matters for Hirudotherapy
This single-center 12-year retrospective cohort of 886 elderly patients (mean age 78.4 years) with non-valvular atrial fibrillation found major bleeding in 7.1% overall, fewer in the DOAC group (6.6%) than the warfarin group (10.5%), with older age, prior bleeding, higher HAS-BLED score, and concomitant antiplatelet use as significant predictors. For ASH it quantifies the baseline bleeding vulnerability of the elderly anticoagulated population, a group for whom adding a leech's hirudin- and calin-rich, prolonged-oozing wound demands especially careful screening and informed consent. As a retrospective single-center cohort it shows association rather than causation, may not generalize beyond its setting, and does not address hirudotherapy directly.
Citation
Prevalence of Major Bleeding in Elderly Patients on Oral Anticoagulants for Non-Valvular Atrial Fibrillation: A Single-Center 12-Year Retrospective Review.
Kwan et al. · Geriatrics (Basel, Switzerland), 2025
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