AI Article Synopsis

  • The study aimed to assess the effectiveness of two bleeding risk assessment scores—HAS-BLED and DOAC score—among patients with atrial fibrillation who are on direct oral anticoagulants (DOAC).
  • Analysis included 2834 patients, revealing that the DOAC score identified a significantly higher proportion of very low-risk patients compared to the HAS-BLED score.
  • However, both scoring systems showed only modest predictive abilities for major bleeding events, indicating no strong preference for using the DOAC score over HAS-BLED in this context.

Article Abstract

Background: The DOAC score has been recently proposed for bleeding risk stratification of patients with atrial fibrillation treated with direct oral anticoagulants (DOAC).

Objective: To compare the performance of HAS-BLED and DOAC score in predicting major bleeding events in a contemporary cohort of European AF patients treated with DOAC.

Methods: We included patients derived from a prospective observational registry of European AF patients. HAS-BLED and DOAC scores were calculated as per the original schemes. Our primary endpoint was major bleeding events. Receiver operating characteristic (ROC) curves were used to compare the predictive ability of the scores.

Results: A total of 2834 AF patients (median age [IQR] 69 [62-77] years; 39.6 % female) treated with DOAC were included in the analysis. According to the HAS-BLED score, 577 patients (20.4 %) were categorized as very low risk of bleeding, as compared to 1276 (45.0 %) according to DOAC score. A total of 55 major bleeding events occurred with an overall incidence of 1.04 per 100 patient-years. Both scores showed only a modest ability for the prediction of bleeding events (HAS-BLED area under the curve [AUC], 0.65, 95 % confidence interval [CI] 0.55-0.70; DOAC score AUC 0.62, 95 % CI 0.59-0.71, p for difference = 0.332]. At calibration analysis, the DOAC score showed modest calibration, especially for patients at high risk, when compared to HAS-BLED.

Conclusion: In a contemporary cohort of DOAC-treated AF patients, both HAS-BLED and DOAC scores only modestly predicted the occurrence of major bleeding events. Our results do not support the preferential use of DOAC score over HAS-BLED.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ejim.2024.06.022DOI Listing

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