AI Article Synopsis

  • Atrial fibrillation (AF) patients benefit from anticoagulation for stroke prevention but need a method to assess bleeding risk, which is done using scores like HAS-BLED.
  • The study aimed to determine whether a modified HAS-BLED score, called HAS-BED (excluding "labile INR"), remains effective at predicting bleeding risk and to compare its predictive power with other models (CHADS and CHADSVASc).
  • Findings showed that both HAS-BLED and HAS-BED scores were better at identifying high-risk patients compared to CHADS and CHADSVASc, but for naïve patients, the predictive ability of HAS-BED aligned closely with CHADS and CHADSVASc scores.

Article Abstract

Anticoagulation is recommended in patients with atrial fibrillation (AF) for stroke prevention, and the bleeding risk associated suggests the need for a bleeding risk stratification. HAS-BLED (hypertension, abnormal renal/liver function, stroke, bleeding history or predisposition, labile international normalized ratio (INR), elderly >65 years, drugs/alcohol concomitantly) score includes "labile INR" referred to quality of anticoagulation. However, in naïve patients, this item is not available. In addition, stroke and bleeding risk prediction scores shared several risk factors. The aims of our study were as follows: (1) to evaluate if the HAS-BLED score in its refined form excluding "labile INR" (HAS-BED [hypertension, abnormal renal/liver function, stroke, bleeding history or predisposition, elderly, drugs/alcohol]) is still associated with bleeding risk and (2) to evaluate the predictive ability for bleeding of both stroke and bleeding prediction models. We followed an inception cohort of 4,579 patients with AF enrolled in the Survey on anticoagulaTed pAtients RegisTer (NCT02219984). Major bleeds were recorded. During follow-up (7,014 patient-years), 115 patients experienced a major bleeding (MB; rate 1.6 × 100 patient-years). Patients at high risk were better identified by HAS-BLED and HAS-BED scores with respect to CHADS (congestive heart failure, hypertension, age >75 years, diabetes, previous stroke or transient ischemic attack) and CHADSVASc (congestive heart, failure, hypertension, age [>75 years], diabetes, stroke/transient ischemic attack, vascular disease, age [65 to 74 years], female gender). HAS-BLED has a slightly higher c value in comparison to CHADS and CHADSVASc. However, among naïve patients, the predictive ability for hemorrhage of HAS-BED score is overlapping with CHADS and CHADSVASc. In low stroke risk patients (CHADSVASc = 0 to 1), only 6 patients are at high bleeding risk, and none of them experienced MB. In conclusion, in our prospective cohort of patients with AF, we found that HAS-BLED and HAS-BED scores identify patients at high bleeding risk. However, the predictive value for MB of HAS-BED used in naïve patients is similar to CHADS or CHADSVASc, suggesting that stroke stratification scores could be sufficient for tailoring treatment.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.amjcard.2016.12.007DOI Listing

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