Title of article
Should Major Vascular Surgery Be Delayed Because of Preoperative Cardiac Testing in Intermediate-Risk Patients Receiving Beta-Blocker Therapy With Tight Heart Rate Control? Original Research Article
Author/Authors
Don Poldermans، نويسنده , , Jeroen J. Bax، نويسنده , , Olaf Schouten، نويسنده , , Aleksandar N. Neskovic، نويسنده , , Bernard Paelinck، نويسنده , , Guido Rocci، نويسنده , , Laura van Dortmont، نويسنده , , Anai E.S. Durazzo، نويسنده , , Louis L.M. van de Ven، نويسنده , , Marc R.H.M. van Sambeek، نويسنده , , Miklos D. Kertai، نويسنده , , Eric Boersma and Dutch Echocardiographic Cardiac Risk Evaluation Applying Stress Echo Study Group، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2006
Pages
6
From page
964
To page
969
Abstract
Objectives
The purpose of this study was to assess the value of preoperative cardiac testing in intermediate-risk patients receiving beta-blocker therapy with tight heart rate (HR) control scheduled for major vascular surgery.
Background
Treatment guidelines of the American College of Cardiology/American Heart Association recommend cardiac testing in these patients to identify subjects at increased risk. This policy delays surgery, even though test results might be redundant and beta-blockers with tight HR control provide sufficient myocardial protection. Furthermore, the benefit of revascularization in high-risk patients is ill-defined.
Methods
All 1,476 screened patients were stratified into low-risk (0 risk factors), intermediate-risk (1 to 2 risk factors), and high-risk (≥3 risk factors). All patients received beta-blockers. The 770 intermediate-risk patients were randomly assigned to cardiac stress-testing (n = 386) or no testing. Test results influenced management. In patients with ischemia, physicians aimed to control HR below the ischemic threshold. Those with extensive stress-induced ischemia were considered for revascularization. The primary end point was cardiac death or myocardial infarction at 30-days after surgery.
Results
Testing showed no ischemia in 287 patients (74%); limited ischemia in 65 patients (17%), and extensive ischemia in 34 patients (8.8%). Of 34 patients with extensive ischemia, revascularization before surgery was feasible in 12 patients (35%). Patients assigned to no testing had similar incidence of the primary end point as those assigned to testing (1.8% vs. 2.3%; odds ratio [OR] 0.78; 95% confidence interval [CI] 0.28 to 2.1; p = 0.62). The strategy of no testing brought surgery almost 3 weeks forward. Regardless of allocated strategy, patients with a HR <65 beats/min had lower risk than the remaining patients (1.3% vs. 5.2%; OR 0.24; 95% CI 0.09 to 0.66; p = 0.003).
Conclusions
Cardiac testing can safely be omitted in intermediate-risk patients, provided that beta-blockers aiming at tight HR control are prescribed.
Keywords
odds ratio , myocardial infarction , Confidence interval , MI , OR , CI , ACC/AHA , American College of Cardiology/ American Heart Association
Journal title
JACC (Journal of the American College of Cardiology)
Serial Year
2006
Journal title
JACC (Journal of the American College of Cardiology)
Record number
471993
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