No support for dual antiplatelet therapy after heart bypass surgery
Dual antiplatelet therapy after heart bypass surgery is not more effective than aspirin alone – and it increases the risk of excessive bleeding. This has now been shown in a study of 2,201 patients at 22 Nordic heart surgery units.
The TACSI Study
The study is being published in The New England Journal of Medicine and presented at the European Society of Cardiology’s ESC Congress 2025 in Madrid.
The TACSI study is a prospective registry-based randomized study using data from the SWEDEHEART quality registry and patients’ medical records.
The study has been conducted at all 22 Nordic thoracic surgery units.
The study was funded by the Swedish Research Council, the Swedish Heart Lung Foundation and the Swedish state under the ALF agreement.
Heart bypass surgery (CABG)
Heart bypass surgery (Coronary Artery Bypass Grafting, CABG) is the most common heart surgery. It is performed on patients with severe narrowing of the coronary arteries.
CABG is elective in cases of stable coronary artery disease or performed as an emergency procedure in cases of heart attack or severe angina.
The procedure involves grafting of a blood vessel, often taken from the leg or chest, to the heart. The graftl carries oxygenated blood past the narrowing in the heart’s coronary artery, thereby ensuring that the heart receives enough oxygen.
About 2,500 CABG procedures are performed in Sweden each year.