HAS-BLED


HAS-BLED is a scoring system developed to assess 1-year risk of major bleeding in patients taking anticoagulants with atrial fibrillation. It was developed in 2010 with data from 3,978 patients in the Euro Heart Survey.
Major bleeding is defined as being intracranial bleedings, hospitalization, hemoglobin decrease > 2 g/dL, and/or transfusion.
ConditionPoints
H Hypertension:
1
A Abnormal renal function: Dialysis, transplant, Cr >2.26 mg/dL or >200 µmol/L
Abnormal liver function: Cirrhosis or Bilirubin >2x Normal or AST/ALT/AP >3x Normal
1


1
S Stroke: Prior history of stroke
1
B Bleeding: Prior Major Bleeding or Predisposition to Bleeding
1
L Labile INR:, Time in Therapeutic Range < 60%
1
E Elderly: Age > 65 years
1
D Prior Alcohol or Drug Usage History
Medication Usage Predisposing to Bleeding:
1


1

A calculated HAS-BLED score is between 0 and 9 and based on seven parameters with a weighted value of 0-2.
The HAS-BLED mnemonic stands for:
A study comparing HEMORR2HAGES, ATRIA and HAS-BLED showed superior performance of the HAS-BLED score compared to the other two.
The new ESC guidelines on atrial fibrillation recommend assessment of bleeding risk in AF using the HAS-BLED bleeding risk schema as a simple, easy calculation, whereby a score of ≥3 indicates "high risk" and some caution and regular review of the patient is needed. The HAS-BLED score has also been validated in an anticoagulated trial cohort of 7329 patients with AF - in this study, the HAS-BLED score offered some improvement in predictive capability for bleeding risk over previously published bleeding risk assessment schemas and was simpler to apply. With the likely availability of new oral anticoagulants that avoid the limitations of warfarin, more widespread use of oral anticoagulation therapy for stroke prevention in AF is likely.
While their use is recommended in clinical practice guidelines, they are only moderately effective in predicting bleeding risk and don't perform well in predicting hemorrhagic stroke. Bleeding risk may be increased in patients on haemodialysis.