Anticoagulant alone lowers bleeding without harm
In chronic coronary disease needing long-term anticoagulation, anticoagulant monotherapy lowered bleeding without increasing heart attack, stroke, or death.
*Systematic review and meta-analysis of randomized trials; Level 1a (OCEBM).
Citation
Ahmed M, Rana JS, Ahmed R, Fonarow GC. Oral anticoagulant monotherapy in patients with chronic coronary disease: An updated meta-analysis. The American Journal of Medicine. 2026;139:232–237. doi:10.1016/j.amjmed.2025.09.019
Background
People with chronic coronary disease who also need long-term blood thinners often receive an added antiplatelet drug, which can raise bleeding risk. This study compared anticoagulant alone versus anticoagulant plus one antiplatelet drug.
Patients
4,964 adults with chronic coronary disease in 5 randomized trials; most had atrial fibrillation and prior coronary stenting. Exclusions varied by trial; overall population required long-term oral anticoagulation.
Intervention
Oral anticoagulant alone.
Control
Oral anticoagulant plus a single antiplatelet drug (such as aspirin or a P2Y12 inhibitor).
Outcome
Primary: composite of cardiovascular death, stroke, heart attack, and major bleeding. Secondary: death and clot-related events; safety: bleeding outcomes.
Follow-up Period
Median about 24 months (range across trials roughly 12–30 months).
Results
| Outcome |
Effect (risk ratio, 95% confidence interval) |
Direction |
| Composite outcome (primary) |
0.68 (0.53–0.85) |
Fewer events with anticoagulant alone |
| Major bleeding |
0.49 (0.31–0.77) |
Less bleeding with anticoagulant alone |
| Major or clinically important non-major bleeding |
0.50 (0.37–0.68) |
Less bleeding with anticoagulant alone |
Event rates were not reported in the abstracted text, so numbers needed to treat could not be calculated.
Limitations
Most participants were from Asian trials, which may limit applicability to more diverse populations. Bleeding results showed moderate differences between trials. The primary composite outcome likely improved mainly because bleeding decreased, not because clot-related events decreased; rare events limit certainty about small differences in heart attack risk.
Funding
No study funding; one author reported industry consulting outside the work.
Clinical Application
For stable chronic coronary disease needing long-term anticoagulation, consider stopping routine single antiplatelet therapy to reduce bleeding, unless coronary clot risk is exceptionally high.