CHA2DS2-VA Score
Definition
CHA2DS2-VA is the updated thromboembolic risk stratification score for atrial fibrillation introduced in the 2024 ESC AF Guidelines. It is derived from the prior CHA2DS2-VASc score by removing the sex category ('Sc'), reflecting evidence that female sex alone does not independently increase AF-related stroke risk. It is used to guide decisions on initiation of oral anticoagulation.
Key Concepts
Score Components
- C — Congestive heart failure: 1 point
- H — Hypertension: 1 point
- A2 — Age ≥75 years: 2 points
- D — Diabetes mellitus: 1 point
- S2 — Prior stroke/TIA/arterial thromboembolism: 2 points
- V — Vascular disease (prior MI, PAD, or aortic plaque): 1 point
- A — Age 65–74 years: 1 point
- Maximum score: 9 points (sources/AF-ESC-2024, rating: very high)
Clinical Decision Thresholds
- Score ≥2: OAC is recommended (Class I/C) (sources/AF-ESC-2024)
- Score = 1: OAC should be considered (Class IIa/C) (sources/AF-ESC-2024)
- Score = 0: OAC is generally not recommended; no treatment for stroke prevention
- Reassessment at periodic intervals recommended as risk factors may change over time (Class I/B) (sources/AF-ESC-2024)
Key Caveats
- Temporal pattern of AF (paroxysmal, persistent, permanent) is not relevant to OAC decisions — thromboembolic risk is present regardless of AF type (Class III — do not withhold OAC based on AF type) (sources/AF-ESC-2024)
- OAC recommended regardless of CHA2DS2-VA score in AF patients with hypertrophic cardiomyopathy or cardiac amyloidosis (Class I/B) (sources/AF-ESC-2024)
- Device-detected subclinical AF with high CHA2DS2-VA score: DOAC may be considered (Class IIb/B), balancing stroke reduction (ARTESiA: HR 0.63 for stroke/SE) against bleeding increase (HR 1.36 for major bleeding) (sources/AF-ESC-2024)
Anticoagulant Choice
- DOACs (apixaban, dabigatran, edoxaban, rivaroxaban) preferred over VKAs for eligible patients (Class I/A) (sources/AF-ESC-2024)
- VKAs remain indicated for mechanical heart valves and moderate-to-severe mitral stenosis (sources/AF-ESC-2024)
- Reduced DOAC doses should only be used if specific dose-reduction criteria are met — avoiding underdosing is critical (Class III against underdosing) (sources/AF-ESC-2024)
Contradictions / Open Questions
- Stroke occurs in very young AF with score = 0: In a prospective cohort of 122 patients with AF before age 40 without structural heart disease, 5 patients (4.1%) suffered a stroke despite all having CHA₂DS₂-VA = 0 and none being anticoagulated — 4 events at first AF presentation. This observational finding challenges the assumption that score 0 confers negligible thromboembolic risk in very young AF patients, though the mechanism (LA thrombus vs. paradoxical embolism vs. other) was not characterized. Current guidelines provide no anticoagulation guidance for this phenotype. (sources/eoaf-riskfactor-ehj-2026, rating: medium)
- Evidence base for anticoagulation was generated using CHA2DS2-VASc, not CHA2DS2-VA; the practical impact of removing sex category is a modest refinement (sources/AF-ESC-2024)
- Patients with CHA2DS2-VA score 0 or 1 were largely excluded from major RCTs; evidence for OAC in this group is limited (sources/AF-ESC-2024)
- Optimal approach for patients with device-detected subclinical AF (duration, burden threshold for anticoagulation) remains undefined (sources/AF-ESC-2024)
- ESC vs. AHA sex category disagreement: The 2024 ESC guideline uses CHA₂DS₂-VA (sex removed, max score 9), whereas the 2023 AHA guideline retains CHA₂DS₂-VASc (sex category retained, max score 9). The AHA rationale: female sex remains a risk modifier that interacts with other risk factors, particularly in patients aged ≥65 years. The ESC rationale: female sex alone does not independently increase stroke risk in the absence of other risk factors. The two scores produce discordant recommendations in women with score 0 (ESC: no OAC; AHA: may recommend OAC if CHA₂DS₂-VASc = 1 in the female patient, score = 0 by CHA₂DS₂-VA but 1 by CHA₂DS₂-VASc). (sources/AF-AHA-2023, sources/AF-ESC-2024)
- AHA device-detected AHRE thresholds differ from ESC: AHA uses duration-stratified thresholds (≥24h = Class IIa; 5min–24h + score ≥3 = Class IIb; <5min = no OAC), while ESC applies a single Class IIb/B recommendation for high-risk patients with device-detected AF regardless of duration (sources/AF-AHA-2023, sources/AF-ESC-2024)
Connections
- Related to concepts/AF-CARE
- Related to concepts/AF-Staging
- Related to entities/Atrial-Fibrillation