HAS-BLED Score Calculator — Assess Bleeding Risk in Atrial Fibrillation Patients

HAS-BLED Score Calculator

Calculate the HAS-BLED score to assess bleeding risk in patients with atrial fibrillation. Determine appropriate anticoagulation therapy management.

Step 1: Clinical History

Understanding HAS-BLED

The HAS-BLED score estimates the risk of major bleeding for patients on anticoagulation therapy for atrial fibrillation. One point is assigned for each risk factor present.

Step 2: Additional Factors

65
140

About HAS-BLED Score

A score of 0-2 indicates low to moderate bleeding risk. A score of ≥3 indicates high bleeding risk, suggesting caution and regular review of anticoagulation therapy.

HAS-BLED Score Results

Summary
Risk Assessment
Clinical Recommendations

HAS-BLED Score

0
Low Bleeding Risk
Low Risk
Major Bleeding Risk (Annual)
1.13%
Risk Factors Present
0 of 9
Suggested Monitoring
Annual Review
Score Interpretation
Safe for Anticoagulation

Bleeding Risk Assessment

HAS-BLED Score Bleeding Risk Category Major Bleeding (per 100 patient-years) Clinical Implication

Risk Interpretation

High HAS-BLED scores (≥3) indicate increased bleeding risk but do not preclude anticoagulation. They suggest the need for regular review, correction of modifiable risk factors, and careful monitoring.

Clinical Recommendations

For Score 0-2
Low-Moderate Risk
Standard anticoagulation therapy is appropriate with annual review.
For Score ≥3
High Risk
Increased caution, regular review (every 3-6 months), and address modifiable risk factors.

Modifiable Risk Factors

Addressing Bleeding Risk

Uncontrolled hypertension, labile INR, concurrent use of antiplatelet/NSAID drugs, and alcohol abuse are modifiable risk factors that should be addressed to reduce bleeding risk.

HAS-BLED Score Calculation

HAS-BLED Acronym

Hypertension, Abnormal renal/liver function, Stroke, Bleeding history, Labile INR, Elderly, Drugs/alcohol. Each factor scores 1 point.

Need Clinical Consultation?

This calculator is for educational purposes only. Always consult a healthcare professional for medical decisions regarding anticoagulation therapy and bleeding risk assessment.

Consult Healthcare Professional