J Stroke.  2025 May;27(2):195-206. 10.5853/jos.2025.00206.

Anticoagulation Failure in Stroke: Causes, Risk Factors, and Treatment

Affiliations
  • 1Department of Neurology, Gangneung Asan Hospital, University of Ulsan, Gangneung, Korea

Abstract

Anticoagulation is crucial to reducing the risk of cardioembolic strokes, particularly in vulnerable populations such as patients with atrial fibrillation, artificial heart valves, or left ventricular thrombus. Though successful, anticoagulation failure (the occurrence of an ischemic stroke or systemic embolism while receiving therapy) remains a major stroke-care issue. The reason for anticoagulation failure can be below the required threshold, inability to follow up, drug-drug interactions, preexisting hypercoagulable states, or anticoagulant resistance. This failure undermines stroke prevention and requires tailored management, often requiring more drastic or alternative interventions. This review examines what drives anticoagulation failure and explores predictors of this failure in clinical, imaging, and laboratory data. It also discusses current management techniques for improving control and points to new treatments and possible futures, such as high-resolution imaging and personalized medicine based on biomarkers, to help tackle this critical clinical problem.

Keyword

Anticoagulation failure; Stroke prevention; Direct oral anticoagulants; Hypercoagulable states; Personalized medicine
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