Clinical impact of kidney function in patients with atrial fibrillation receiving oral anticoagulants
Research article published in International journal of cardiology (2025)
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Renal function influences the pharmacokinetics of oral anticoagulants in atrial fibrillation (AF), potentially affecting both efficacy and bleeding risk. However, its differential impact across specific agents remains unclear. In this study, we aimed to evaluate the association between renal function and ischemic and bleeding risks in patients with AF, with analyses stratified by anticoagulant type. METHODS: We analyzed 7239 patients with non-valvular AF from the DIRECT-Extend registry, a pooled dataset of three large-scale registries. Creatinine clearance (CrCl) was calculated using the Cockcroft-Gault formula and categorized into ≥50, 30 to <50, and 15 to <30 mL/min. The primary ischemic endpoint was stroke or systemic embolism, and the primary bleeding endpoint was major bleeding. Cox proportional hazard models and restricted cubic spline analyses assessed associations between CrCl and outcomes, with subgroup analyses by anticoagulant type. RESULTS: Lower CrCl was associated with older age, female sex, and greater comorbidity burden. Impaired renal function was significantly associated with higher ischemic and bleeding risks. Spline analysis demonstrated a continuous increase in both risks with declining CrCl, with a nonlinear relationship for bleeding. Subgroup analyses revealed significant associations between reduced CrCl and ischemic risk in patients on dabigatran, rivaroxaban, edoxaban, and warfarin. Increased bleeding risk was evident for edoxaban and warfarin at lower CrCl levels. No significant association was observed between CrCl and either endpoint in patients receiving apixaban. CONCLUSION: In this large real-world cohort, declining renal function was associated with increased ischemic and bleeding risks, highlighting the importance of renal function-based risk assessment in the management of anticoagulation therapy.
Abstract sourced from PubMed (NCBI) for the cited record. See the original publication for the authoritative version.
Resumen
Peer-reviewed clinical and outcomes research relevant to medicinal leech therapy and its biology. Indexed in PubMed and verified against the NCBI record.
Por qué esto importa para la hirudoterapia
Este estudio utilizó el registro agrupado DIRECT-Extend de 7,239 pacientes con fibrilación auricular no valvular para examinar cómo la función renal se relaciona con el riesgo isquémico y hemorrágico en anticoagulantes orales específicos; la disminución del aclaramiento de creatinina se asoció con un aumento continuo de los riesgos isquémicos y hemorrágicos, con asociaciones isquémicas significativas para dabigatran, rivaroxaban, edoxaban y warfarin, un aumento de hemorragias para edoxaban y warfarin, y ninguna asociación significativa para apixaban, lo que subraya la importancia de la evaluación del riesgo basada en la función renal. Su relevancia para la hirudoterapia es contextual: dabigatran es un inhibidor directo de la trombina oral que actúa sobre la misma enzima que el péptido de sanguijuela hirudin, por lo que los datos ayudan a trazar el perfil de seguridad de la vía de inhibición de la trombina que sustenta la historia de los antitrombóticos derivados de sanguijuelas. Advertencia: se trata de una cohorte observacional de la vida real de anticoagulantes orales sintéticos; no estudia la terapia con sanguijuelas medicinales ni hirudin, las asociaciones no son causales y los hallazgos reflejan la farmacocinética específica del agente y de la función renal, en lugar de cualquier afirmación relacionada con las sanguijuelas.
Citación
Clinical impact of kidney function in patients with atrial fibrillation receiving oral anticoagulants.
Matsuoka et al. · International journal of cardiology, 2025
Contexto clínico relacionado
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Añadido a la biblioteca ASH: May 29, 2026 · Última actualización del sitio: June 18, 2026