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CHA2DS2–VASc score

The CHADS2 score and its updated version, the CHA2DS2-VASc score, are clinical prediction rules for estimating the risk of stroke in people with non-rheumatic atrial fibrillation (AF), a common and serious heart arrhythmia associated with thromboembolic stroke. Such a score is used to determine whether or not treatment is required with anticoagulation therapy or antiplatelet therapy,[1] since AF can cause stasis of blood in the upper heart chambers, leading to the formation of a mural thrombus that can dislodge into the blood flow, reach the brain, cut off supply to the brain, and cause a stroke.

CHA2DS2–VASc score
Purposerisk of stroke (for non-rheumatic atrial fibrillation)

A high score corresponds to a greater risk of stroke, while a low score corresponds to a lower risk of stroke. The CHADS2 score is simple and has been validated by many studies.[2] In clinical use, the CHADS2 score (pronounced "chads two") has been superseded by the CHA2DS2-VASc score ("chads vasc"[3]), which gives a better stratification of low-risk patients.

Use

The CHA2DS2-VASc score is a widely used medical tool used to guide physicians on blood thinning treatment to prevent stroke in people with non-valvular atrial fibrillation (AF).[4][5]

CHADS2

The CHADS2 score does not include some common stroke risk factors, and its various pros/cons have been carefully discussed.[6] Adding together the points that correspond to the conditions that are present results in the CHADS2 score, that is used to estimate stroke risk.

CHADS2[7]
Condition Points
 C   Congestive heart failure 1
 H  Hypertension: blood pressure consistently above 140/90 mmHg (or treated hypertension on medication) 1
 A  Age ≥75 years 1
 D  Diabetes mellitus 1
 S2  Prior Stroke or TIA or Thromboembolism 2
Annual stroke risk (%)[2]
CHADS2 Score Risk 95% CI
0 1.9  1.2–3.0
1 2.8  2.0–3.8
2 4.0  3.1–5.1
3 5.9  4.6–7.3
4 8.5  6.3–11.1
5 12.5  8.2–17.5
6 18.2 10.5–27.4

CHA2DS2-VASc

To complement the CHADS2 score, by the inclusion of additional 'stroke risk modifier' risk factors, the CHA2DS2-VASc-score has been proposed.[8]

In clinical use, the CHADS2 score has been superseded by the CHA2DS2-VASc score, which gives a better stratification of low-risk patients. The CHADS2 score has been outperformed by the CHA2DS2-VASc in multiple patient groups including patients with AF who are receiving outpatient elective electrical cardioversion.[9]

CHA2DS2-VASc
Condition Points
 C   Congestive heart failure (or Left ventricular systolic dysfunction) 1
 H  Hypertension: blood pressure consistently above 140/90 mmHg (or treated hypertension on medication) 1
 A2  Age ≥75 years 2
 D  Diabetes Mellitus 1
 S2  Prior Stroke or TIA or thromboembolism 2
 V  Vascular disease (e.g. peripheral artery disease, myocardial infarction, aortic plaque) 1
 A  Age 65–74 years 1
 Sc  Sex category (i.e. female sex) 1

Thus, the CHA2DS2-VASc score is a refinement of CHADS2[8][10] score and extends the latter by including additional common stroke risk factors, that is, age 65–74, female gender and vascular disease.[11] In the CHA2DS2-VASc score, 'age 75 and above' also has extra weight, with 2 points.

The maximum CHADS2 score is 6, whilst the maximum CHA2DS2-VASc score is 9 (not 10, as might be expected from simply adding up the columns; the maximum score for age is 2 points).

Annual stroke risk (%)
CHA2DS2-VASc score Friberg 2012[12] Lip 2010[8] 95% CI[8]
0  0.2  0.0  0.0–0.0
1  0.6  0.6  0.0–3.4
2  2.2  1.6  0.3–4.7
3  3.2  3.9  1.7–7.6
4  4.8  1.9  0.5–4.9
5  7.2  3.2  0.7–9.0
6  9.7  3.6 0.4–12.3
7 11.2  8.0 1.0–26.0
8 10.8 11.1 0.3–48.3
9 12.2 100  2.5–100

Major guidelines have used the above fixed annual stroke risk as a guideline of starting anticoagulant treatment; where the ischemic stroke risk of more than 1% to 2% should be an indication to start an anticoagulant therapy. However, actual risk of getting stroke varies according to sampling method and geographical regions, as well as use of appropriate study analysis methodology.[13] A meta-analysis of various studies in 2015 shown that annual stroke risk is less than 1% in 13 of the 17 studies for CHA2DS2-VASc score of 1, 6 out of 15 studies reported risk of 1 to 2% and 5 out of 15 studies reported risk of more than 2% for CHA2DS2-VASc score of 2.[14] Nevertheless, stroke rates vary by study setting (hospital vs community), population (trial vs general), ethnicity, etc. Some studies included in the metaanalysis include females with score 1 by virtue of gender (who are low risk), into the aggregate rates; others included do not account for followup anticoagulation use (thus lowering rates) and were analysed by excluding all patients ever started on anticoagulants ('conditioning on the future' error).[15]

The CHA2DS2-VASc Score has shown increasing popularity over time while the CHADS2 has shown decreasing popularity,[16] which could "partly be related to introduction of guidelines recommending the use of the CHA2DS2-VASc score for stroke risk stratification".[16] The predictive abilities of risk scores for ischemic stroke in patients with kidney function impairment is questionable: a large head-to-head external validation study demonstrated poor discrimination and calibration in patients with reduced kidney function.[17]

Treatment recommendations

The CHA2DS2-VASc score has been used in the 2012 and subsequent European Society of Cardiology guidelines for the management of atrial fibrillation.[18][19][20][21] The 2014 American College of Cardiology/American Heart Association Task Force on Practice Guidelines and the Heart Rhythm Society guidelines also recommend use of the CHA2DS2-VASc score.[22]

The European Society of Cardiology (ESC),[21] and National Institute for Health and Care Excellence (NICE)[23] guidelines recommend that if the patient has a CHA2DS2-VASc score of 2 and above, oral anticoagulation therapy (OAC) with a vitamin K antagonist (VKA, e.g. warfarin with target INR of 2-3) or one of the direct oral anticoagulant drugs (DOACs, e.g. dabigatran, rivaroxaban, edoxaban, or apixaban) is recommended.

If the patient is 'low risk' using the CHA2DS2-VASc score (that is, 0 in males or 1 in females), no anticoagulant therapy is recommended.

In males with 1 stroke risk factor (that is, a CHA2DS2-VASc score=1), antithrombotic therapy with OAC may be considered, and people's values and preferences should be considered.[24] Even a single stroke risk factor confers excess risk of stroke and mortality, with a positive net clinical benefit for stroke prevention with oral anticoagulation, when compared to no treatment or aspirin.[25] As mentioned above, thromboembolic event rates differ according to various guideline treatment thresholds and methodological approaches.[26]

Anticoagulation

Treatment recommendations based on the CHA2DS2-VASc score are shown in the following table:

Score Risk Anticoagulation Therapy Considerations[18][27]
0 (male) or 1 (female) Low No anticoagulant therapy No anticoagulant therapy
1 (male) Moderate Oral anticoagulant should be considered Oral anticoagulant, with well controlled vitamin K antagonist (VKA, e.g. warfarin with time in therapeutic range >70%), or a direct oral anticoagulant (DOAC, e.g. dabigatran, rivaroxaban, edoxaban or apixaban)
2 or greater High Oral anticoagulant is recommended Oral anticoagulant, with well controlled vitamin K antagonist (VKA, e.g. warfarin with time in therapeutic range >70%), or a direct oral anticoagulant (DOAC, e.g. dabigatran, rivaroxaban, edoxaban or apixaban)

Based on the ESC guidelines on AF, oral anticoagulation is recommended or preferred for people with one or more stroke risk factors (i.e. a CHA2DS2-VASc score of ≥1 in males, or ≥2 in females).[28][29] This is consistent with a recent decision analysis model showing how the 'tipping point' on the decision to anticoagulate has changed with the availability of the 'safer' DOAC drugs, where the threshold for offering stroke prevention (i.e. oral anticoagulation) is a stroke rate of approximately 1%/year.[20][30]

Those patients recommended for stroke prevention treatment via oral anticoagulation, choice of drug (i.e. between a vitamin K antagonist and direct oral anticoagulant (DOAC)) can be evaluated using the SAMe-TT2R2 score to help decision-making on the most appropriate oral anticoagulant.[31][32]

Bleeding risk

Stroke risk assessment should always include an assessment of bleeding risk. This can be done using validated bleeding risk scores, such as the HEMORR2HAGES or HAS-BLED scores. The HAS-BLED score is recommended in guidelines, to identify the high risk patient for regular review and followup and to address the reversible risk factors for bleeding (e.g. uncontrolled hypertension, labile INRS, excess alcohol use or concomitant aspirin/NSAID use).[27] If the patient is taking warfarin, then knowledge of INR control is needed to assess the 'labile INR' criterion in HAS-BLED; otherwise for a non-warfarin patient, this criterion scores zero. A high HAS-BLED score is not a reason to withhold anticoagulation. Also, when compared to HAS-BLED, other bleeding risk scores that did not consider 'labile INR' would significantly underperform in predicting bleeding on warfarin, and would often inappropriately categorise many patients who sustained bleeds as 'low risk'.[33]

History

The CHA2DS2-VASc score expanded from the CHADS2 score, first published in 2001.[34]

References

  1. ^ Gage BF, van Walraven C, Pearce L, et al. (2004). "Selecting patients with atrial fibrillation for anticoagulation: stroke risk stratification in patients taking aspirin". Circulation. 110 (16): 2287–92. doi:10.1161/01.CIR.0000145172.55640.93. PMID 15477396.
  2. ^ a b Gage BF, Waterman AD, Shannon W, Boechler M, Rich MW, Radford MJ (2001). "Validation of clinical classification schemes for predicting stroke: results from the National Registry of Atrial Fibrillation". JAMA. 285 (22): 2864–70. doi:10.1001/jama.285.22.2864. PMID 11401607.
  3. ^ Professor Gregory Lip Discusses CHA2DS2-VASc Tool for Predicting Stroke Risk in Atrial Fibrillation
  4. ^ Siddiqi, Tariq Jamal; Usman, Muhammad Shariq; Shahid, Izza; Ahmed, Jawad; Khan, Safi U.; Ya'qoub, Lina; Rihal, Charanjit S.; Alkhouli, Mohamad (9 March 2021). "Utility of the CHA2DS2-VASc score for predicting ischaemic stroke in patients with or without atrial fibrillation: a systematic review and meta-analysis". European Journal of Preventive Cardiology. 29 (4): 625–631. doi:10.1093/eurjpc/zwab018. ISSN 2047-4881. PMID 33693717.
  5. ^ Kiser, Kathryn (2017). Oral Anticoagulation Therapy: Cases and Clinical Correlation. Springer. p. 20. ISBN 9783319546438.
  6. ^ Karthikeyan G, Eikelboom JW. The CHADS2 score for stroke risk stratification in atrial fibrillation--friend or foe? Thromb. Haemost. 2010 Jul 5;104(1):45-8.
  7. ^ . VA Palo Alto Medical Center and at Stanford University: the Sportsmedicine Program and the Cardiomyopathy Clinic. Archived from the original on 2019-02-22. Retrieved 2007-09-14.
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  20. ^ a b Kirchhof, Paulus; Benussi, Stefano; Kotecha, Dipak; Ahlsson, Anders; Atar, Dan; Casadei, Barbara; Castella, Manuel; Diener, Hans-Christoph; Heidbuchel, Hein; Hendriks, Jeroen; Hindricks, Gerhard; Manolis, Antonis S.; Oldgren, Jonas; Popescu, Bogdan Alexandru; Schotten, Ulrich; Van Putte, Bart; Vardas, Panagiotis; Agewall, Stefan; Camm, John; Baron Esquivias, Gonzalo; Budts, Werner; Carerj, Scipione; Casselman, Filip; Coca, Antonio; De Caterina, Raffaele; Deftereos, Spiridon; Dobrev, Dobromir; Ferro, José M.; Filippatos, Gerasimos; Fitzsimons, Donna; Gorenek, Bulent; Guenoun, Maxine; Hohnloser, Stefan H.; Kolh, Philippe; Lip, Gregory Y. H.; Manolis, Athanasios; McMurray, John; Ponikowski, Piotr; Rosenhek, Raphael; Ruschitzka, Frank; Savelieva, Irina; Sharma, Sanjay; Suwalski, Piotr; Tamargo, Juan Luis; Taylor, Clare J.; Van Gelder, Isabelle C.; Voors, Adriaan A.; Windecker, Stephan; Zamorano, Jose Luis; Zeppenfeld, Katja (7 October 2016). "2016 ESC Guidelines for the management of atrial fibrillation developed in collaboration with EACTS". European Heart Journal. 37 (38): 2893–2962. doi:10.1093/eurheartj/ehw210. PMID 27567408. Retrieved 12 February 2017.
  21. ^ a b Hindricks, Gerhard; Potpara, Tatjana; Dagres, Nikolaos; Arbelo, Elena; Bax, Jeroen J.; Blomström-Lundqvist, Carina; Boriani, Giuseppe; Castella, Manuel; Dan, Gheorghe-Andrei; Dilaveris, Polychronis E.; Fauchier, Laurent (2020-08-29). "2020 ESC Guidelines for the diagnosis and management of atrial fibrillation developed in collaboration with the European Association of Cardio-Thoracic Surgery (EACTS)". European Heart Journal. 42 (5): 373–498. doi:10.1093/eurheartj/ehaa612. ISSN 1522-9645. PMID 32860505.
  22. ^ January CT, Wann LS, Alpert JS, Calkins H, Cigarroa JE, Cleveland JC Jr, Conti JB, Ellinor PT, Ezekowitz MD, Field ME, Murray KT, Sacco RL, Stevenson WG, Tchou PJ, Tracy CM, Yancy CW (Dec 2014). "2014 AHA/ACC/HRS guideline for the management of patients with atrial fibrillation: a report of the American College of Cardiology/American Heart Association Task Force on Practice Guidelines and the Heart Rhythm Society". J Am Coll Cardiol. 64 (21): e1–76. doi:10.1016/j.jacc.2014.03.022. PMID 24685669.
  23. ^ "Atrial fibrillation: management | Guidance and guidelines | NICE". www.nice.org.uk. June 2014. Retrieved 12 February 2017.
  24. ^ Joundi, RA; Cipriano, LE; Sposato, LA; Saposnik, G; Stroke Outcomes Research Working, Group (May 2016). "Ischemic Stroke Risk in Patients With Atrial Fibrillation and CHA2DS2-VASc Score of 1: Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis". Stroke: A Journal of Cerebral Circulation. 47 (5): 1364–7. doi:10.1161/strokeaha.115.012609. PMID 27026630. S2CID 3692570.
  25. ^ Fauchier, L; Clementy, N; Bisson, A; Ivanes, F; Angoulvant, D; Babuty, D (2016). "Should Atrial Fibrillation Patients With Only 1 Nongender-Related CHA2DS2-VASc Risk Factor Be Anticoagulated?". Stroke. 47 (7): 1831–6. doi:10.1161/STROKEAHA.116.013253. PMID 27231269. S2CID 3666736.
  26. ^ Nielsen P; Larsen TB; Skjøth F; et al. (2016). "Stroke and thromboembolic event rates in atrial fibrillation according to different guideline treatment thresholds: A nationwide cohort study". Sci Rep. 6: 27410. Bibcode:2016NatSR...627410N. doi:10.1038/srep27410. PMC 4893655. PMID 27265586.
  27. ^ a b National Clinical Guideline Centre (June 2014). "Atrial Fibrillation: The Management of Atrial Fibrillation". London: National Institute for Health and Care Excellence. PMID 25340239. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  28. ^ Lip GY, Lane DA (2015). "Stroke prevention in atrial fibrillation: a systematic review". JAMA. 313 (19): 1950–62. doi:10.1001/jama.2015.4369. PMID 25988464.
  29. ^ Sulzgruber, Patrick; Doehner, Wolfram; Niessner, Alexander (1 February 2021). "Valvular atrial fibrillation and a CHA2DS2-VASc score of 1-a statement of the ESC working group on cardiovascular pharmacotherapy and ESC council on stroke". European Heart Journal. 42 (5): 541–543. doi:10.1093/eurheartj/ehaa1081. ISSN 1522-9645. PMID 33496325.
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  34. ^ Ajam, Tarek (27 February 2020). . emedicine.medscape.com. Archived from the original on 11 April 2021. Retrieved 11 April 2021.

External links

  • given CHADS2 Score
  • Online calculator of the CHA2DS2-VASc score

vasc, score, other, uses, chad, disambiguation, chads2, score, updated, version, cha2ds2, vasc, score, clinical, prediction, rules, estimating, risk, stroke, people, with, rheumatic, atrial, fibrillation, common, serious, heart, arrhythmia, associated, with, t. For other uses see Chad disambiguation The CHADS2 score and its updated version the CHA2DS2 VASc score are clinical prediction rules for estimating the risk of stroke in people with non rheumatic atrial fibrillation AF a common and serious heart arrhythmia associated with thromboembolic stroke Such a score is used to determine whether or not treatment is required with anticoagulation therapy or antiplatelet therapy 1 since AF can cause stasis of blood in the upper heart chambers leading to the formation of a mural thrombus that can dislodge into the blood flow reach the brain cut off supply to the brain and cause a stroke CHA2DS2 VASc scorePurposerisk of stroke for non rheumatic atrial fibrillation A high score corresponds to a greater risk of stroke while a low score corresponds to a lower risk of stroke The CHADS2 score is simple and has been validated by many studies 2 In clinical use the CHADS2 score pronounced chads two has been superseded by the CHA2DS2 VASc score chads vasc 3 which gives a better stratification of low risk patients Contents 1 Use 2 CHADS2 3 CHA2DS2 VASc 4 Treatment recommendations 4 1 Anticoagulation 4 2 Bleeding risk 5 History 6 References 7 External linksUse EditThe CHA2DS2 VASc score is a widely used medical tool used to guide physicians on blood thinning treatment to prevent stroke in people with non valvular atrial fibrillation AF 4 5 CHADS2 EditThe CHADS2 score does not include some common stroke risk factors and its various pros cons have been carefully discussed 6 Adding together the points that correspond to the conditions that are present results in the CHADS2 score that is used to estimate stroke risk CHADS2 7 Condition Points C Congestive heart failure 1 H Hypertension blood pressure consistently above 140 90 mmHg or treated hypertension on medication 1 A Age 75 years 1 D Diabetes mellitus 1 S2 Prior Stroke or TIA or Thromboembolism 2 Annual stroke risk 2 CHADS2 Score Risk 95 CI0 1 9 1 2 3 01 2 8 2 0 3 82 4 0 3 1 5 13 5 9 4 6 7 34 8 5 6 3 11 15 12 5 8 2 17 56 18 2 10 5 27 4CHA2DS2 VASc EditTo complement the CHADS2 score by the inclusion of additional stroke risk modifier risk factors the CHA2DS2 VASc score has been proposed 8 In clinical use the CHADS2 score has been superseded by the CHA2DS2 VASc score which gives a better stratification of low risk patients The CHADS2 score has been outperformed by the CHA2DS2 VASc in multiple patient groups including patients with AF who are receiving outpatient elective electrical cardioversion 9 CHA2DS2 VASc Condition Points C Congestive heart failure or Left ventricular systolic dysfunction 1 H Hypertension blood pressure consistently above 140 90 mmHg or treated hypertension on medication 1 A2 Age 75 years 2 D Diabetes Mellitus 1 S2 Prior Stroke or TIA or thromboembolism 2 V Vascular disease e g peripheral artery disease myocardial infarction aortic plaque 1 A Age 65 74 years 1 Sc Sex category i e female sex 1Thus the CHA2DS2 VASc score is a refinement of CHADS2 8 10 score and extends the latter by including additional common stroke risk factors that is age 65 74 female gender and vascular disease 11 In the CHA2DS2 VASc score age 75 and above also has extra weight with 2 points The maximum CHADS2 score is 6 whilst the maximum CHA2DS2 VASc score is 9 not 10 as might be expected from simply adding up the columns the maximum score for age is 2 points Annual stroke risk CHA2DS2 VASc score Friberg 2012 12 Lip 2010 8 95 CI 8 0 0 2 0 0 0 0 0 01 0 6 0 6 0 0 3 42 2 2 1 6 0 3 4 73 3 2 3 9 1 7 7 64 4 8 1 9 0 5 4 95 7 2 3 2 0 7 9 06 9 7 3 6 0 4 12 37 11 2 8 0 1 0 26 08 10 8 11 1 0 3 48 39 12 2 100 2 5 100 Major guidelines have used the above fixed annual stroke risk as a guideline of starting anticoagulant treatment where the ischemic stroke risk of more than 1 to 2 should be an indication to start an anticoagulant therapy However actual risk of getting stroke varies according to sampling method and geographical regions as well as use of appropriate study analysis methodology 13 A meta analysis of various studies in 2015 shown that annual stroke risk is less than 1 in 13 of the 17 studies for CHA2DS2 VASc score of 1 6 out of 15 studies reported risk of 1 to 2 and 5 out of 15 studies reported risk of more than 2 for CHA2DS2 VASc score of 2 14 Nevertheless stroke rates vary by study setting hospital vs community population trial vs general ethnicity etc Some studies included in the metaanalysis include females with score 1 by virtue of gender who are low risk into the aggregate rates others included do not account for followup anticoagulation use thus lowering rates and were analysed by excluding all patients ever started on anticoagulants conditioning on the future error 15 The CHA2DS2 VASc Score has shown increasing popularity over time while the CHADS2 has shown decreasing popularity 16 which could partly be related to introduction of guidelines recommending the use of the CHA2DS2 VASc score for stroke risk stratification 16 The predictive abilities of risk scores for ischemic stroke in patients with kidney function impairment is questionable a large head to head external validation study demonstrated poor discrimination and calibration in patients with reduced kidney function 17 Treatment recommendations EditThe CHA2DS2 VASc score has been used in the 2012 and subsequent European Society of Cardiology guidelines for the management of atrial fibrillation 18 19 20 21 The 2014 American College of Cardiology American Heart Association Task Force on Practice Guidelines and the Heart Rhythm Society guidelines also recommend use of the CHA2DS2 VASc score 22 The European Society of Cardiology ESC 21 and National Institute for Health and Care Excellence NICE 23 guidelines recommend that if the patient has a CHA2DS2 VASc score of 2 and above oral anticoagulation therapy OAC with a vitamin K antagonist VKA e g warfarin with target INR of 2 3 or one of the direct oral anticoagulant drugs DOACs e g dabigatran rivaroxaban edoxaban or apixaban is recommended If the patient is low risk using the CHA2DS2 VASc score that is 0 in males or 1 in females no anticoagulant therapy is recommended In males with 1 stroke risk factor that is a CHA2DS2 VASc score 1 antithrombotic therapy with OAC may be considered and people s values and preferences should be considered 24 Even a single stroke risk factor confers excess risk of stroke and mortality with a positive net clinical benefit for stroke prevention with oral anticoagulation when compared to no treatment or aspirin 25 As mentioned above thromboembolic event rates differ according to various guideline treatment thresholds and methodological approaches 26 Anticoagulation Edit Treatment recommendations based on the CHA2DS2 VASc score are shown in the following table Score Risk Anticoagulation Therapy Considerations 18 27 0 male or 1 female Low No anticoagulant therapy No anticoagulant therapy1 male Moderate Oral anticoagulant should be considered Oral anticoagulant with well controlled vitamin K antagonist VKA e g warfarin with time in therapeutic range gt 70 or a direct oral anticoagulant DOAC e g dabigatran rivaroxaban edoxaban or apixaban 2 or greater High Oral anticoagulant is recommended Oral anticoagulant with well controlled vitamin K antagonist VKA e g warfarin with time in therapeutic range gt 70 or a direct oral anticoagulant DOAC e g dabigatran rivaroxaban edoxaban or apixaban Based on the ESC guidelines on AF oral anticoagulation is recommended or preferred for people with one or more stroke risk factors i e a CHA2DS2 VASc score of 1 in males or 2 in females 28 29 This is consistent with a recent decision analysis model showing how the tipping point on the decision to anticoagulate has changed with the availability of the safer DOAC drugs where the threshold for offering stroke prevention i e oral anticoagulation is a stroke rate of approximately 1 year 20 30 Those patients recommended for stroke prevention treatment via oral anticoagulation choice of drug i e between a vitamin K antagonist and direct oral anticoagulant DOAC can be evaluated using the SAMe TT2R2 score to help decision making on the most appropriate oral anticoagulant 31 32 Bleeding risk Edit Main article HAS BLED Stroke risk assessment should always include an assessment of bleeding risk This can be done using validated bleeding risk scores such as the HEMORR2HAGES or HAS BLED scores The HAS BLED score is recommended in guidelines to identify the high risk patient for regular review and followup and to address the reversible risk factors for bleeding e g uncontrolled hypertension labile INRS excess alcohol use or concomitant aspirin NSAID use 27 If the patient is taking warfarin then knowledge of INR control is needed to assess the labile INR criterion in HAS BLED otherwise for a non warfarin patient this criterion scores zero A high HAS BLED score is not a reason to withhold anticoagulation Also when compared to HAS BLED other bleeding risk scores that did not consider labile INR would significantly underperform in predicting bleeding on warfarin and would often inappropriately categorise many patients who sustained bleeds as low risk 33 History EditThe CHA2DS2 VASc score expanded from the CHADS2 score first published in 2001 34 References Edit Gage BF van Walraven C Pearce L et al 2004 Selecting patients with atrial fibrillation for anticoagulation stroke risk stratification in patients taking aspirin Circulation 110 16 2287 92 doi 10 1161 01 CIR 0000145172 55640 93 PMID 15477396 a b Gage BF Waterman AD Shannon W Boechler M Rich MW Radford MJ 2001 Validation of clinical classification schemes for predicting stroke results from the National Registry of Atrial Fibrillation JAMA 285 22 2864 70 doi 10 1001 jama 285 22 2864 PMID 11401607 Professor Gregory Lip Discusses CHA2DS2 VASc Tool for Predicting Stroke Risk in Atrial Fibrillation Siddiqi Tariq Jamal Usman Muhammad Shariq Shahid Izza Ahmed Jawad Khan Safi U Ya qoub Lina Rihal Charanjit S Alkhouli Mohamad 9 March 2021 Utility of the CHA2DS2 VASc score for predicting ischaemic stroke in patients with or without atrial fibrillation a systematic review and meta analysis European Journal of Preventive Cardiology 29 4 625 631 doi 10 1093 eurjpc zwab018 ISSN 2047 4881 PMID 33693717 Kiser Kathryn 2017 Oral Anticoagulation Therapy Cases and Clinical Correlation Springer p 20 ISBN 9783319546438 Karthikeyan G Eikelboom JW The CHADS2 score for stroke risk stratification in atrial fibrillation friend or foe Thromb Haemost 2010 Jul 5 104 1 45 8 Risk of Stroke with AF VA Palo Alto Medical Center and at Stanford University the Sportsmedicine Program and the Cardiomyopathy Clinic Archived from the original on 2019 02 22 Retrieved 2007 09 14 a b c d Lip GY Nieuwlaat R Pisters R Lane DA Crijns HJ Feb 2010 Refining clinical risk stratification for predicting stroke and thromboembolism in atrial fibrillation using a novel risk factor based approach the euro heart survey on atrial fibrillation Chest 137 2 263 72 doi 10 1378 chest 09 1584 PMID 19762550 Yarmohammadi H Varr BC Puwanant S Lieber E Williams SJ Klostermann T Jasper SE Whitman C Klein AL 2012 Role of CHADS2 score in evaluation of thromboembolic risk and mortality in patients with atrial fibrillation undergoing direct current cardioversion from the ACUTE Trial Substudy Am J Cardiol 110 2 222 26 doi 10 1016 j amjcard 2012 03 017 PMID 22503581 Sandhu R K Bakal J A Ezekowitz J A McAlister F A 10 November 2011 Risk stratification schemes anticoagulation use and outcomes the risk treatment paradox in patients with newly diagnosed non valvular atrial fibrillation Heart 97 24 2046 50 doi 10 1136 heartjnl 2011 300901 PMID 22076011 Retrieved 12 February 2017 UCSF Cardiology Atrial Fibrillation Medical Management cardiology ucsf edu Archived from the original on 29 July 2016 Retrieved 12 February 2017 Friberg Leif Rosenqvist Marten Lip Gregory YH 13 January 2012 Evaluation of risk stratification schemes for ischaemic stroke and bleeding in 182 678 patients with atrial fibrillation the Swedish Atrial Fibrillation cohort study European Heart Journal 33 12 Table 2 doi 10 1093 eurheartj ehr488 PMID 22246443 Retrieved 8 October 2020 Nielsen Peter B 2016 Stroke and thromboembolic event rates in atrial fibrillation according to different guideline treatment thresholds A nationwide cohort study Scientific Reports 6 27410 Bibcode 2016NatSR 627410N doi 10 1038 srep27410 PMC 4893655 PMID 27265586 Gene R Quinn Olivia N Severdija Yuchiao Chang Daniel E Singer 31 October 2016 Wide Variation in Reported Rates of Stroke Across Cohorts of Patients with Atrial Fibrillation Circulation 135 3 208 19 doi 10 1161 CIRCULATIONAHA 116 024057 PMID 27799272 S2CID 207608289 Nielsen P Lip G 2017 Adding Rigor to Stroke Rate Investigations in Patients With Atrial Fibrillation Circulation 135 3 220 223 doi 10 1161 CIRCULATIONAHA 116 025944 PMID 28093493 S2CID 37525194 a b Lip GY Habboushe J Altman C 2019 Time trends in use of the CHADS2 and CHA2DS2 VASc scores and the geographical and specialty uptake of these scores from a popular online clinical decision tool and medical reference PDF International Journal of Clinical Practice 73 2 e13280 doi 10 1111 ijcp 13280 PMID 30281876 S2CID 52916514 de Jong Ype Fu Edouard L van Diepen Merel Trevisan Marco Szummer Karolina Dekker Friedo W Carrero Juan J Gurbey Ocak 2021 Validation of risk scores for ischaemic stroke in atrial fibrillation across the spectrum of kidney function European Heart Journal 42 15 1476 1485 doi 10 1093 eurheartj ehab059 PMC 8046502 PMID 33769473 a b Camm AJ Lip GY De Caterina R Savelieva I Atar D Hohnloser SH Hindricks G Kirchhof P Oct 2012 2012 focused update of the ESC Guidelines for the management of atrial fibrillation an update of the 2010 ESC Guidelines for the management of atrial fibrillation developed with the special contribution of the European Heart Rhythm Association Europace 14 10 1385 413 doi 10 1093 europace eus305 PMID 22923145 Camm A J Kirchhof P Lip G Y H Schotten U Savelieva I Ernst S Van Gelder I C Al Attar N Hindricks G Prendergast B Heidbuchel H Alfieri O Angelini A Atar D Colonna P De Caterina R De Sutter J Goette A Gorenek B Heldal M Hohloser S H Kolh P Le Heuzey J Y Ponikowski P Rutten F H Vahanian A Auricchio A Bax J Ceconi C et al Oct 2010 Guidelines for the management of atrial fibrillation the Task Force for the Management of Atrial Fibrillation of the European Society of Cardiology ESC Eur Heart J 31 19 2369 429 doi 10 1093 eurheartj ehq278 PMID 20802247 a b Kirchhof Paulus Benussi Stefano Kotecha Dipak Ahlsson Anders Atar Dan Casadei Barbara Castella Manuel Diener Hans Christoph Heidbuchel Hein Hendriks Jeroen Hindricks Gerhard Manolis Antonis S Oldgren Jonas Popescu Bogdan Alexandru Schotten Ulrich Van Putte Bart Vardas Panagiotis Agewall Stefan Camm John Baron Esquivias Gonzalo Budts Werner Carerj Scipione Casselman Filip Coca Antonio De Caterina Raffaele Deftereos Spiridon Dobrev Dobromir Ferro Jose M Filippatos Gerasimos Fitzsimons Donna Gorenek Bulent Guenoun Maxine Hohnloser Stefan H Kolh Philippe Lip Gregory Y H Manolis Athanasios McMurray John Ponikowski Piotr Rosenhek Raphael Ruschitzka Frank Savelieva Irina Sharma Sanjay Suwalski Piotr Tamargo Juan Luis Taylor Clare J Van Gelder Isabelle C Voors Adriaan A Windecker Stephan Zamorano Jose Luis Zeppenfeld Katja 7 October 2016 2016 ESC Guidelines for the management of atrial fibrillation developed in collaboration with EACTS European Heart Journal 37 38 2893 2962 doi 10 1093 eurheartj ehw210 PMID 27567408 Retrieved 12 February 2017 a b Hindricks Gerhard Potpara Tatjana Dagres Nikolaos Arbelo Elena Bax Jeroen J Blomstrom Lundqvist Carina Boriani Giuseppe Castella Manuel Dan Gheorghe Andrei Dilaveris Polychronis E Fauchier Laurent 2020 08 29 2020 ESC Guidelines for the diagnosis and management of atrial fibrillation developed in collaboration with the European Association of Cardio Thoracic Surgery EACTS European Heart Journal 42 5 373 498 doi 10 1093 eurheartj ehaa612 ISSN 1522 9645 PMID 32860505 January CT Wann LS Alpert JS Calkins H Cigarroa JE Cleveland JC Jr Conti JB Ellinor PT Ezekowitz MD Field ME Murray KT Sacco RL Stevenson WG Tchou PJ Tracy CM Yancy CW Dec 2014 2014 AHA ACC HRS guideline for the management of patients with atrial fibrillation a report of the American College of Cardiology American Heart Association Task Force on Practice Guidelines and the Heart Rhythm Society J Am Coll Cardiol 64 21 e1 76 doi 10 1016 j jacc 2014 03 022 PMID 24685669 Atrial fibrillation management Guidance and guidelines NICE www nice org uk June 2014 Retrieved 12 February 2017 Joundi RA Cipriano LE Sposato LA Saposnik G Stroke Outcomes Research Working Group May 2016 Ischemic Stroke Risk in Patients With Atrial Fibrillation and CHA2DS2 VASc Score of 1 Systematic Review and Meta Analysis Stroke A Journal of Cerebral Circulation 47 5 1364 7 doi 10 1161 strokeaha 115 012609 PMID 27026630 S2CID 3692570 Fauchier L Clementy N Bisson A Ivanes F Angoulvant D Babuty D 2016 Should Atrial Fibrillation Patients With Only 1 Nongender Related CHA2DS2 VASc Risk Factor Be Anticoagulated Stroke 47 7 1831 6 doi 10 1161 STROKEAHA 116 013253 PMID 27231269 S2CID 3666736 Nielsen P Larsen TB Skjoth F et al 2016 Stroke and thromboembolic event rates in atrial fibrillation according to different guideline treatment thresholds A nationwide cohort study Sci Rep 6 27410 Bibcode 2016NatSR 627410N doi 10 1038 srep27410 PMC 4893655 PMID 27265586 a b National Clinical Guideline Centre June 2014 Atrial Fibrillation The Management of Atrial Fibrillation London National Institute for Health and Care Excellence PMID 25340239 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Lip GY Lane DA 2015 Stroke prevention in atrial fibrillation a systematic review JAMA 313 19 1950 62 doi 10 1001 jama 2015 4369 PMID 25988464 Sulzgruber Patrick Doehner Wolfram Niessner Alexander 1 February 2021 Valvular atrial fibrillation and a CHA2DS2 VASc score of 1 a statement of the ESC working group on cardiovascular pharmacotherapy and ESC council on stroke European Heart Journal 42 5 541 543 doi 10 1093 eurheartj ehaa1081 ISSN 1522 9645 PMID 33496325 Eckman MH Singer DE Rosand J Greenberg SM Jan 2011 Moving the tipping point the decision to anticoagulate patients with atrial fibrillation Circ Cardiovasc Qual Outcomes 4 1 14 21 doi 10 1161 circoutcomes 110 958108 PMC 3058150 PMID 21139092 Apostolakis S Sullivan RM Olshansky B Lip GY Nov 2013 Factors affecting quality of anticoagulation control among patients with atrial fibrillation on warfarin the SAMe TT R score Chest 144 5 1555 63 doi 10 1378 chest 13 0054 PMID 23669885 Proietti Marco Lip Gregory Y H July 2015 Simple decision making between a vitamin K antagonist and a non vitamin K antagonist oral anticoagulant using the SAMe TT2R2 score European Heart Journal Cardiovascular Pharmacotherapy 1 3 150 152 doi 10 1093 ehjcvp pvv012 PMID 27533987 Proietti Marco Senoo Keitaro Lane Deirdre A Lip Gregory Y H Apr 2016 Major Bleeding in Patients with Non Valvular Atrial Fibrillation Impact of Time in Therapeutic Range on Contemporary Bleeding Risk Scores Sci Rep 6 24376 Bibcode 2016NatSR 624376P doi 10 1038 srep24376 PMC 4828703 PMID 27067661 Ajam Tarek 27 February 2020 CHADS2 Score for Stroke Risk Assessment in Atrial Fibrillation CHADS2 and CHA2DS2 VASc Score for Stroke Risk Assessment in Atrial Fibrillation emedicine medscape com Archived from the original on 11 April 2021 Retrieved 11 April 2021 External links EditDosing information given CHADS2 Score Online calculator of the CHA2DS2 VASc score Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title CHA2DS2 VASc score amp oldid 1105278562, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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