1 / 41

Preoperative Cardiovascular Evaluation for Noncardiac Surgery - An Update

Preoperative Cardiovascular Evaluation for Noncardiac Surgery - An Update. February 27, 2002 Robert B. Preli. Overview. Scope of the Problem Purpose of Clinical Practice Guidelines ACC/AHA 2002 Guideline Update/Review The ACP Guideline Validation Study Lee’s Revised Cardiac Risk Index

ainslie
Download Presentation

Preoperative Cardiovascular Evaluation for Noncardiac Surgery - An Update

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Preoperative Cardiovascular Evaluation for Noncardiac Surgery - An Update February 27, 2002 Robert B. Preli

  2. Overview • Scope of the Problem • Purpose of Clinical Practice Guidelines • ACC/AHA 2002 Guideline Update/Review • The ACP Guideline • Validation Study • Lee’s Revised Cardiac Risk Index • Conclusions

  3. Scope of the Problem - Epidemiology • 27 million patients per year in the United States are given anesthesia for surgeries • 8 million have known CAD or risk factors • 50,000 who undergo noncardiac surgery will have a perioperative MI • 1 million will have a perioperative complication • Common reason for consultation during AIM rotation

  4. Scope of the Problem:Purpose of Assessment • “Revascularization before noncardiac surgery to enable the patient to ‘get through’ the procedure is appropriate for only a small subset of patients.” • Determine who can go directly to surgery • Determine who: • have additional tests prior to surgery • needs medical management prior to surgery • Risk stratify patients, NOT “clear” them for surgery

  5. Practice Guideline Characteristics • Comprehensive review of the evidence • Expert opinion used to make value judgements • Official endorsement by an organization • Intention to influence your practice patterns

  6. ACC/AHA Guidelines • “Guidelines for Perioperative Cardiovascular Evaluation for Noncardiac Surgery” • First published in 1996 by the ACC/AHA • Updated in January, 2002 • Guidelines are available at: • www.acc.org • www.americanheart.org

  7. Preop Cardiac Assessment

  8. Exercise Tolerance

  9. Surgical Risk

  10. 2002 Guideline Highlights • New intermediate clinical predictor is “Renal Insufficiency” • Preoperative creatinine > 2.0 mg/dl • New “Shortcut to Noninvasive Testing” table to assist in clinical decision making • New “When and Which Test” table to assist in choosing testing modality • Strong endorsement for beta blocker use in the appropriate patient population • More than 400 new relevant articles went into the 2002 guidelines

  11. Revascularization • In general, limit to patients who have a clearly defined need independent of surgery • Preoperative CABG • Should be reserved for high-risk patients undergoing high risk procedures in whom long-term outcome would be improved by CABG • Preoperative PCI • Indications are identical to the general ACC/AHA guidelines for the use of PTCA • Wait 2-4 weeks after stent placement for elective noncardiac surgery

  12. Revascularization • Coronary Artery Surgery Study (CASS) • 24,959 patients in database from the NHLBI between 1974-1979 • All CASS patients had coronary angiography at enrollment • Database enrollees treated with CABG or medical management based on physician preference • Identified 3368 patients who required noncardiac surgery during 10 years of followup • Surgeries included general (631), orthopedic (214), urologic (327), minor (90) Eagle, Circulation, 1997;96

  13. CASS • End points included mortality within 30 days of procedure or myocardial infarction • Among 1961 patients undergoing high risk surgery, prior CABG was associated with fewer events when compared to medical management: • Death: 1.7% versus 3.3% (p=0.03) • MI: 0.8% versus 2.7% (p=0.002) • 1297 patients undergoing low risk procedures had a mortality of <1% regardless of prior coronary treatment Eagle, Circulation, 1997;96

  14. Medical Therapy - So What About Beta Blockers? • Mangano et al (NEJM, 1996) • Poldermans et al (NEJM, 1999)

  15. Medical Therapy • Mangano et al (NEJM, 1996) • 200 men at a VA with CAD or at risk for CAD • Randomized to IV Atenolol 30 minutes prior to noncardiac surgery continued throughout hsopitalization versus placebo • No difference in perioperative mortality or cardiovascular endpoints • At 2 years: • Mortality ARR = 11%, NNT = 9 • CV events ARR = 15%, NNT= 7 • 2 year endpoints, aggressive HR control

  16. Medical Therapy • Poldermans et al (NEJM, 1999) • 112 high-risk patients (positive DSE) • high-risk major vascular surgeries (AAA repair, Aorto-fem bypass) • Randomized to Bisoprolol 5-10 QD (starting one week prior to surgery and continued 30 days post-op), or standard care • Combined 30 day endpoints of mortality or non-fatal MI • ARR = 31%, NNT = 3 • Generalizability, aggressive HR control

  17. So Who Gets Beta Blockers? Fleisher. NEJM, Vol 345, 2001

  18. Medical Therapy - Summary • Very few randomized trials • Appropriately administered beta blockers may reduce the risk of MI and death in high-risk patients • If possible, start beta blockers days or weeks before elective surgery • Titrate dose to a resting HR between 50-60 • Alpha-2 agonists may have similar effects (clonidine, mivazerol)

  19. ACP Guideline • Does not take into account a patient’s functional status • Does not tend to recommend stress testing in situations when patient is intermediate risk where ACC/AHA guideline is more test oriented

  20. Mark Wilson’s Guideline • “If the patient walked into your clinic (and was not going to surgery), would you order a stress test based on their history and physical?” • “Let sleeping dogs lie.”

  21. How Well Do We Risk Stratify? • “Prospective Evaluation of Cardiac Risk Indices for Patients Undergoing Noncardiac Surgery” Gilbert et al (Annals, 2000) • Compared four existing methods for predicting perioperative cardiac risk in a prospective cohort study • 2035 patients referred for medical consultation before urgent or elective non-cardiac surgery • Endpoints included cardiac events (MI, angina, or acute pulmonary edema), and death (all-cause mortality)

  22. Gilbert - Methods • Patients were categorized according to the following indices: • American Society of Anesthesiologists (ASA), 1963 • Goldman, 1977 • Detsky (ACP algorithm), 1997 • Canadian Cardiovascular Society (CCS), 1976 • Cardiac events were defined clinically and according to generally accepted criteria • myocardial infarction, unstable angina, acute pulmonary edema • Death defined as all-cause mortality

  23. Gilbert - Methods • To determine the accuracy of the stratification systems • Receiver-operating characteristic (ROC) curves were calculated for each index • Areas under the ROC curve (accuracy) were compared

  24. Patient Characteristics (2035)

  25. Gilbert - Results • Cardiac Events - 130 (6.4%) • MI - 36 (1.8%) • Pulmonary Edema - 67 (3.3%) • Unstable Angina - 27 (1.3%) • Deaths - 48 (2.4%)

  26. Gilbert - ResultsAlgorithm Accuracy

  27. Gilbert - Conclusions • None of the models was significantly superior to the others • Cardiac risk indices provide useful clinical information about risk, but have limited overall accuracy • There remains room for improvement in our ability to determine which patients are at greatest risk for cardiac complications

  28. But Wait . . . • “Prediction of Perioperative Risk: The Glass May Be Three-Quarters Full”, Eagle et al (Annals, 2000) • Tested guidelines do not take into account functional status and therefore risk may have been underestimated • Patients may not have had implementation of medical therapy based on their risk • Most importantly, identification of risk is not synonymous with prediction of adverse events

  29. Eagle - Editorial • The population studied was one in which there was a low prevalence of complications • Identification of high-risk individuals may have led to changes in therapy, and therefore low accuracy may be a marker of successful management

  30. Lee’s Revised Cardiac Risk Index • Lee et al. “Derivation and Prospective Validation of a Simple Index for Prediction of Cardiac Risk of Major Noncardiac Surgery.” Circulation, 1999. • Prospective investigation to derive and validate a simple index for the prediction of the risk of cardiac complications in major elective noncardiac surgery

  31. Lee - Methods • Patients > 50 years old • Nonemergent, noncardiac surgery • All patients had serial CK enzymes and EKG’s post-operatively • Major cardiac complications defined as MI, pulmonary edema, vfib, cardiac arrest, complete heart block

  32. Lee - Subjects • Mean age = 66 +/- 10 years • 33% Orthopedic procedures • 40% High risk procedures • 16% History of MI

  33. Lee - Subjects

  34. Lee - Results • Patients who were using beta blockers at the time of admission had similar rates of complications as those who were not: • Beta blockers - 2.4% complications • No beta blockers - 1.8% complications

  35. Lee - Results • 6 independent correlates of major cardiac complications were identified in the derivation cohort: • VariableComplication Rate • High risk surgery 3% • Ischemic heart disease 4% • Congestive heart failure 5% • Hx of CVA 6% • Insulin treated DM 6% • Serum creatinine > 2.0 mg/dl 9%

  36. Lee - Results

  37. Lee - Conclusions • “How the Revised Cardiac Risk Index should be used by clinicians remains to be defined” • Possibly perform noninvasive testing on classes III and IV

  38. Conclusions • Purpose of preoperative assessment is NOT to “clear” the patient • Risk stratify with guidelines • Treat the patient • High risk patients may benefit from further testing • Remember beta blockers in the appropriate patient population

More Related