ROUNDS·
Cardio / Heme · Chest Pain

HEART Score Calculator

Risk-stratifies emergency department chest pain patients for major adverse cardiac events (MACE) within 6 weeks.

What is the HEART Score?

The HEART score risk-stratifies patients presenting to the emergency department with chest pain, helping identify those at low risk who may be suitable for early discharge versus those needing admission and further workup. It was developed by Six and colleagues in the Netherlands and published in the Netherlands Heart Journal in 2008, designed specifically to be more intuitive for emergency clinicians evaluating undifferentiated chest pain than scores originally built for confirmed ACS populations (like TIMI or GRACE).

How to calculate the HEART Score

Five components, each scored 0–2 (total 0–10):

Interpretation

ScoreRisk~6-week MACE
0–3Low~1.7%
4–6Moderate~16.6%
7–10High~50.1%

The "HEART Pathway" protocol combines a low HEART score with two negative serial troponins to support safe early discharge — check your local protocol for how it's implemented.

References

Six AJ, Backus BE, Kelder JC. Chest pain in the emergency room: value of the HEART score. Neth Heart J. 2008.

See also: ECG Interpretation Basics & STEMI Criteria.

Frequently Asked Questions

How is HEART different from TIMI or GRACE?

HEART was designed specifically for undifferentiated ED chest pain, while TIMI and GRACE were originally derived in confirmed ACS populations — HEART tends to perform better for low-risk rule-out decisions in the ED.

What is the HEART Pathway?

It's a protocol that combines a low HEART score with two negative serial troponins to support safe early discharge — implementation details vary by institution.