Combining Clinical and Thallium Data Optimizes Preoperative Assessment of Cardiac Risk before Major Vascular Surgery
- 1 June 1989
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American College of Physicians in Annals of Internal Medicine
- Vol. 110 (11), 859-866
- https://doi.org/10.7326/0003-4819-110-11-859
Abstract
To determine whether clinical markers and preoperative dipyridamole-thallium imaging are both useful in predicting ischemic events after vascular surgery, a retrospective, observational study was performed with two-hundred fifty-four consecutive patients referred to a nuclear cardiology laboratory before surgery. Forty-four patients had surgery cancelled or postponed after clinical evaluation and dipyridamole-thallium imaging. Surgery was not confirmed for ten. Two hundred patients receiving prompt vascular surgery were the study group. Thirty patients (15%) had early postoperative cardiac ischemic events, with cardiac death in 6 (3%) and nonfatal myocardial infarction in 9 (4.5%). Logistic regression identified five clinical predictors (Q waves, history of ventricular ectopic activity, diabetes, advanced age, angina) and two dipyridamole-thallium predictors of postoperative events. Of patients with none of the clinical variables (n = 64), only 2 (3.1%; 95% CI, 0% to 8%) had ischemic events with no cardiac deaths. Ten of twenty (50%; 95% CI, 29% to 71%) patients with three or more clinical markers had events. Eighteen of one hundred sixteen (15.5%; 95% CI, 7% to 21%) patients with either 1 or 2 clinical predictors had events. Within this group, 2 of 62 (3.2%; 95% CI, 0% to 8%) patients without thallium redistribution had events compared with 16 events in 54 patients (29.6%; 95% CI, 16% to 44%) with thallium redistribution. The multivariate model using both clinical and thallium variables showed significantly higher specificity at equivalent sensitivity levels than models using either clinical or thallium variables alone. Preoperative dipyridamole-thallium imaging appears most useful to stratify vascular patients determined to be at intermediate risk by clinical evaluation. For patients with one or two clinical predictors, thallium redistribution correlates with substantial change in probability of events. For nearly half the patients, however, thallium imaging may have been unnecessary because of very high or low cardiac risk predicted by clinical information alone.Keywords
This publication has 11 references indexed in Scilit:
- Noninvasive evaluation of cardiac risk before elective vascular surgeryJournal of the American College of Cardiology, 1987
- Cardiac Prognosis in Noncardiac Geriatric SurgeryAnnals of Internal Medicine, 1985
- Coronary Artery Disease in Patients Requiring Abdominal Aortic Aneurysm Repair Selective Use of a Combined OperationAnnals of Surgery, 1985
- Determination of Cardiac Risk by Dipyridamole-Thallium Imaging before Peripheral Vascular SurgeryNew England Journal of Medicine, 1985
- Coronary Artery Disease in Peripheral Vascular PatientsAnnals of Surgery, 1984
- FATAL MYOCARDIAL-INFARCTION FOLLOWING LOWER-EXTREMITY REVASCULARIZATION - 273 PATIENTS FOLLOWED 6 TO 11 POSTOPERATIVE YEARS1981
- Improved results of carotid endarterectomy in patients with symptomatic coronary disease: an analysis of 1,546 consecutive carotid operations.Stroke, 1979
- Perioperative myocardial infarction in patients with coronary artery disease with and without aorta-coronary artery bypass graftsThe Journal of Thoracic and Cardiovascular Surgery, 1978
- Multifactorial Index of Cardiac Risk in Noncardiac Surgical ProceduresNew England Journal of Medicine, 1977
- MYOCARDIAL REVASCULARIZATION PRIOR TO SUBSEQUENT MAJOR SURGERY IN PATIENTS WITH CORONARY-ARTERY DISEASE1977