Do not offer aspirin monotherapy solely for stroke prevention to people with atrial fibrillation (1) Aspirin monotherapy is not associated with a lower risk of ischemic events, while significantly associated with a higher risk of bleeding events. Patients with AF are unlikely to benefit from aspirin monotherapy. (2)
Use a direct oral anticoagulant (DOAC) in preference to a vitamin K antagonist.
Anticoagulation based on the CHADS2 score
Score  | Risk  | Anticoagulation Therapy  | Considerations  | 
0  | Low  | Aspirin or no treatment  | No antithrombotic therapy (or aspirin)  | 
1  | Moderate  | Aspirin or Warfarin  | Aspirin daily or raise INR to 2.0-3.0, depending on factors such as patient preference  | 
2 or greater  | Moderate or High  | Warfarin  | Raise INR to 2.0-3.0, unless contraindicated (e.g. clinically significant GI bleeding, inability to obtain regular INR screening)  | 
To complement the CHADS2 score, by the inclusion of additional 'stroke risk modifier' risk factors, the CHA2DS2-VASc score has been proposed (1)
CHA2DS2-VASc score for stroke risk in atrial fibrillation
Feature  | Score  | 
Congestive Heart Failure  | 1  | 
Hypertension  | 1  | 
Age >75 years  | 2  | 
Age between 65 and 74 years  | 1  | 
Stroke/TIA/TE  | 2  | 
Vascular disease (previous MI, peripheral arterial disease or aortic plaque)  | 1  | 
Diabetes mellitus  | 1  | 
Female  | 1  | 
Reference:
Annotations allow you to add information to this page that would be handy to have on hand during a consultation. E.g. a website or number. This information will always show when you visit this page.