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Cardiovasculaire risicobepaling in de eerste lijnPublished by: Domus MedicaLast published: 2020Évaluation du risque cardiovasculaire en première lignePublished by: Domus MedicaLast published: 2010Approximately 27 million patients undergo non-cardiac surgery every year in the US.[1] Of those, about 50,000 have a perioperative myocardial infarction (MI). Furthermore, over one half of the 40,000 perioperative deaths each year are caused by cardiac events.[2] Most perioperative cardiac morbidity and mortality is related to MI, heart failure, or arrhythmias. Patients over 65 years of age are at higher risk of cardiac disease, cardiac morbidity, and death. Considering that this patient population will greatly increase over the coming decades, the number of patients with significant perioperative cardiac risk undergoing non-cardiac surgery can be expected to increase globally. Patients with congenital heart disease, especially those with unrepaired lesions or a residual lesion burden and compromised cardiovascular status, also require individualised perioperative management.
Preoperative cardiac risk assessment and perioperative management emphasise the detection, characterisation, and treatment of coronary artery disease (CAD), left ventricular (LV) systolic dysfunction, and significant arrhythmias in appropriate patients. The American Heart Association/American College of Cardiology (AHA/ACC) guidelines for managing adults with congenital heart disease recommend a stepwise approach to preoperative cardiac assessment, but there are currently no guidelines for comprehensive perioperative care of children with congenital heart disease undergoing non-cardiac surgery.[3][4] Patients with known or suspected CAD, arrhythmias, history of heart failure, or current symptoms consistent with these conditions should also undergo assessment. In people aged ≥50 years, a more extensive history and physical examination is warranted.
The purpose of individual preoperative cardiac risk assessment is to:[5][6][7]
Assess the medical status of the patient and the cardiac risks posed by the planned non-cardiac surgery
Recommend appropriate strategies to reduce the risk of cardiac problems over the entire perioperative period, and to improve long-term cardiac outcomes.
The main overall goals of assessment are to:
Identify patients at increased risk of an adverse perioperative cardiac event
Identify patients with a poor long-term prognosis due to cardiovascular disease. Even though the risk at the time of non-cardiac surgery may not be prohibitive, appropriate treatment will affect long-term prognosis.
The nature of the evaluation should be individualised to the patient and the specific clinical scenario.
Patients presenting with an acute surgical emergency require only a rapid preoperative assessment, with subsequent management directed at preventing or minimising cardiac morbidity and death. Such patients can often be more thoroughly evaluated after surgery.
Patients undergoing an elective procedure with no surgical urgency can undergo a more thorough preoperative evaluation.
Eight steps to optimise perioperative outcomes:[8]
1. Assess clinical features
The history and physical examination should help to identify markers of cardiac risk and assess the patient's cardiac status.
High-risk cardiac conditions include recent myocardial infarction (MI), decompensated heart failure, unstable angina, symptomatic arrhythmias, and symptomatic valvular heart disease.[9]
2. Evaluate functional status
Patients who are able to exercise on a regular basis without limitations generally have sufficient cardiovascular reserve to withstand stressful operations.
3. Consider surgery-specific risk
The type of surgery has important implications for perioperative risk. Non-cardiac surgery can be stratified into high-risk, intermediate-risk, and low-risk categories (see below "risk stratification according to type of non-cardiac surgery").
4. Decide whether further non-invasive evaluation is needed
Patients who are at low cardiac risk based on clinical features and functional status, and are undergoing low-risk surgery, do not generally require further evaluation.
Patients who are at high cardiac risk based on clinical features, have poor functional status, and are being considered for high-risk non-cardiac surgery may benefit from further evaluation.
5. Decide when to recommend invasive evaluation
Indications for preoperative coronary angiography are similar to those in the non-operative setting and include patients with evidence of high cardiac risk based on non-invasive testing, angina unresponsive to adequate medical therapy, unstable angina, and proposed intermediate-risk or high-risk non-cardiac surgery after equivocal non-invasive test results.
Angiography and revascularisation are not routinely indicated for patients with stable coronary artery disease (CAD).
6. Optimise cardiovascular risk factors, lifestyle interventions, and medical therapy
Control of cardiovascular risk factors, including hypertension, dyslipidemia, and diabetes, is important before non-cardiac surgery.[5]
Patients should be given optimal medical therapy, both perioperatively and in the long term, based on their underlying cardiac condition.
Lifestyle modifications before non-cardiac surgery may reduce the risk of perioperative complications, but their impact on cardiovascular complications has not been adequately studied. Smoking cessation prior to surgery has the most robust evidence base.[5]
7. Perform appropriate perioperative surveillance
In patients with known or suspected CAD, the possibility of perioperative ischaemia or MI can be estimated based on the magnitude of biomarker elevation, new ECG abnormalities, haemodynamic instability, and the quality and intensity of chest pain or other symptoms.
8. Design maximal long-term therapy
Assessment for hypercholesterolaemia, smoking, hypertension, diabetes mellitus, physical inactivity, peripheral vascular disease, cardiac murmurs, arrhythmias, conduction abnormalities, and/or perioperative ischaemia may lead to evaluation and treatments that reduce future cardiovascular risk.
The patient history should aim to:
Identify cardiac conditions (e.g., recent or past myocardial infarction, decompensated heart failure, prior unstable angina, significant arrhythmias, valvular heart disease)
Identify serious comorbid conditions (e.g., diabetes mellitus, peripheral vascular disease, stroke, renal insufficiency, pulmonary disease)
Determine patient's functional capacity
Document all current medications, allergies, tobacco use, and physical exercise habits.
On physical examination, patients with severe aortic stenosis, elevated jugular venous pressure, pulmonary oedema, and/or third heart sound are at high surgical risk.
The functional capacity of the patient to perform common daily activities has been shown to correlate well with maximum oxygen uptake by treadmill testing.[6] The metabolic equivalent of a task (MET) is a physiological concept expressing the energy cost of a physical activity. The MET reference values are shown below. On assessment, patients with <4 METS are considered to have poor functional capacity and are at relatively high risk of a perioperative event, while patients with >10 METS have excellent functional capacity and are at very low risk of perioperative events, even if they have known coronary artery disease. Patients with a functional capacity of 4 to 10 METS are considered to have fair functional capacity and are generally considered at low risk of perioperative events.
1 MET
Eat, dress, use the toilet
Walk indoors around the house
Walk on level ground at 2 mph (3.2 km/hour)
Perform light housework such as washing dishes.
4 METs
Climb a flight of stairs (usually 18-21 steps)
Walk on level ground at 4 mph (6.4 km/hour)
Run short distances
Perform vacuuming or lift heavy furniture
Play golf or doubles tennis.
>10 METs
Swimming
Singles tennis
Basketball
Skiing.
The presence of ≥1 of the following active cardiac conditions is considered high risk, mandates intensive management, and may result in delay or cancellation of surgery unless the surgery is urgent.[6]
Unstable coronary syndromes
Unstable or severe angina
Recent myocardial infarction (MI)
Decompensated heart failure
Significant arrhythmias
Mobitz II atrioventricular block
Third-degree atrioventricular block
Symptomatic ventricular arrhythmias
Supraventricular arrhythmias (including atrial fibrillation) with uncontrolled ventricular rate (heart rate >100 bpm at rest)
Symptomatic bradycardia
Newly recognized ventricular tachycardia
Severe valvular disease
Severe aortic stenosis (mean pressure gradient >40 mmHg, aortic valve area <1.0 cm², or symptomatic)
Symptomatic mitral stenosis (progressive dyspnoea on exertion, exertional presyncope, or heart failure).
Patients are considered at intermediate risk if there are no active cardiac conditions as defined above, but the patient has 1 or more of the following clinical risk factors:[6]
History of heart disease
History of compensated or prior heart failure
History of cerebrovascular disease
Diabetes mellitus
Renal insufficiency.
Patients are considered at low risk if the active cardiac conditions and clinical risk factors defined above are absent.[6]
Diagnostic tests can be used to refine the risk assessment. Some allow for risk stratification based on the test results (e.g., stress testing).
Revised cardiac risk index (RCRI):
The revised cardiac risk index uses 6 variables to predict perioperative cardiovascular risk:[10]
High-risk surgery (intrathoracic, intra-abdominal, or suprainguinal vascular)
Ischaemic heart disease (defined as a history of MI, pathologic Q waves on the ECG, use of nitrates, abnormal stress test, or chest pain secondary to ischaemic causes)
Presence of congestive heart failure
History of cerebrovascular disease
Diabetes mellitus requiring insulin therapy
Preoperative serum creatinine level higher than 2 mg/dL.
Each of the 6 risk variables are assigned 1 point. Patients with 0, 1, or 2 risk factor(s) are assigned to RCRI classes I, II, and III, respectively. Patients with 3 or more risk factors are class IV and considered at high risk. Each class translates into 0.4% (class I), 0.9% (class II), 6.6% (class III), and 11% (class IV) risk for major cardiac events. Overall, the RCRI performs well in stratifying patients at low compared with high risk for all types of noncardiac surgery, but appears less accurate in patients undergoing vascular surgery.
Vascular Study Group of New England cardiac risk index (VSG-CRI):
The VSG-CRIVSGNE risk index was developed specifically for patients undergoing vascular surgery and applies to carotid endarterectomy, lower extremity bypass, and endovascular and open repair of non-ruptured abdominal aortic aneurysms.[11] The independent predictors of adverse cardiac events (MI, arrhythmia, and heart failure, but not mortality) were increasing age, smoking, insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus, coronary artery disease, coronary heart failure, abnormal cardiac stress test, long-term beta-blocker therapy, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, and creatinine ≥160 micromol/L (≥1.8 mg/dL). Prior cardiac revascularization was protective. The VSG-CRI predicted increasing levels of risk for cardiac events, ranging from 2.6% for the lowest risk scores (0-3) up to 14.3% for the highest risk score (7-8). This risk index performs better than RCRI for those undergoing vascular surgery.[11]
High-risk surgery
Emergency major operations, particularly in older people (>70 years)
Aortic or peripheral vascular
Extensive operations with large volume shifts.
Intermediate-risk surgery
Intraperitoneal or intrathoracic
Carotid endarterectomy
Head and neck
Orthopaedic
Prostate.
Low-risk surgery
Endoscopic procedures
Superficial biopsy
Cataract
Breast.
Patients at risk of an adverse perioperative cardiac event can typically be identified following history and examination. Patients at low risk generally require no additional testing before non-cardiac surgery. However, those with intermediate or high risk undergoing elective non-cardiac surgery may require additional testing.
1. Preoperative resting 12-lead ECG
Not indicated in asymptomatic persons undergoing low-risk surgical procedures (unless the patient has a family history of genetic cardiomyopathy).
Recommended for patients with:
At least 1 clinical risk factor and undergoing vascular surgical procedures (clinical risk factors include history of ischaemic heart disease, compensated or prior heart failure, cerebrovascular disease, diabetes mellitus, renal insufficiency).
Known coronary heart disease, peripheral arterial disease, or cerebrovascular disease, who are undergoing intermediate-risk surgical procedures.[6]
A family history of genetic cardiomyopathy undergoing any non-cardiac surgery, regardless of age or symptoms.[5]
2. Biomarkers
Brain natriuretic peptide or N-terminal pro-brain natriuretic peptide (BNP/NT-proBNP)
BNP appears to be independently predictive for major adverse cardiac events following elective vascular surgery.[12]
Use of BNP to predict cardiovascular events in the first 30 days after vascular surgery can significantly improve the predictive performance of the revised cardiac risk index.[13]
Indicated in patients with cardiovascular disease, cardiovascular risk factors (including age ≥65 years), or symptoms suggestive of cardiovascular disease, before intermediate- or high-risk non-cardiac surgery.[5]
High-sensitivity cardiac troponin T/I (hs-cTn T/I)
Can be used to rule out myocardial ischaemia prior to non-cardiac surgery, and as part of surveillance after surgery.[5]
Indicated in patients with cardiovascular disease, cardiovascular risk factors (including age ≥65 years), or symptoms suggestive of cardiovascular disease, before intermediate- or high-risk non-cardiac surgery.[5]
3. Echocardiography or nuclear testing
Preoperative non-invasive evaluation of left ventricular (LV) function with echocardiography or nuclear testing is reasonable or recommended for patients with:[6]
Dyspnoea of unknown origin.
Current or prior heart failure with worsening dyspnoea or other change in clinical status if LV function has not been assessed within 12 months.
Other indications for transthoracic echocardiography (TTE):
Recommended for patients with poor functional capacity and/or high NT-proBNP/BNP.
Recommended for patients with murmurs detected prior to high-risk non-cardiac surgery.
Before high-risk non-cardiac surgery, also consider TTE for patients with suspected new cardiovascular disease or unexplained signs or symptoms.
Before intermediate-risk non-cardiac surgery, consider for patients with poor functional capacity, abnormal ECG, high NT-proBNP/BNP, or ≥1 clinical risk factor.
Family history of genetic cardiomyopathy.
A focused cardiac ultrasound (FOCUS) examination may be considered as an alternative to TTE to avoid delaying surgery.[5]
Routine perioperative evaluation of LV function is not recommended.[5][6]
4. Stress testing
Useful to detect myocardial ischaemia and functional capacity.
Indicated in patients with active cardiac conditions (e.g., unstable angina, decompensated heart failure, or severe valvular heart disease) who typically need further evaluation.
Reasonable for patients with ≥3 clinical predictors of cardiac risk and poor functional capacity (<4 metabolic equivalents [METs]) who require vascular surgery, if the test will change the patient's management.
Not useful for patients undergoing low-risk non-cardiac surgery.
5. Coronary angiography
Indicated in patients with:
Evidence of high cardiac risk, based on non-invasive testing
Angina unresponsive to adequate medical therapy or unstable angina
Proposed intermediate-risk or high-risk non-cardiac surgery after equivocal non-invasive test results.
1. Exercise ECG
Provides an estimate of functional capacity, detects myocardial ischaemia, and assesses haemodynamic performance during stress. Exercise ECG is the preferred choice when non-invasive testing is indicated and the patient can walk.
Perioperative risk stratification based on exercise ECG:
Low risk: ability to exercise moderately (4-5 METs) without symptoms; patients who can achieve >75% of maximum predicted heart rate without ECG changes.
Intermediate risk: patients with abnormal ECG response at >75% of predicted heart rate.
High risk: patients with abnormal ECG response at <75% of predicted heart rate.
2. Stress imaging
Indicated in patients with abnormal baseline ECG (e.g., left ventricular hypertrophy [LVH], digitalis effect, left bundle branch block). Pharmacological perfusion imaging is indicated in patients undergoing orthopaedic, neurosurgical, or vascular surgery and who are unable to exercise, or who have left bundle branch block or a pacemaker.
Dipyridamole is contraindicated in patients treated to theophylline and patients with severe obstructive lung disease or critical carotid stenosis.
Dobutamine stress echocardiography is comparable with dipyridamole thallium testing as a preoperative evaluation tool, but it should be avoided in patients with severe hypertension, significant arrhythmias, or poor echocardiographic images.
Perioperative risk stratification based on stress imaging:
More than 4 myocardial segments of redistribution indicates significant risk for perioperative events.
Redistribution in 3 coronary artery territories and reversible left ventricular cavity dilation indicates higher risk of events.
Total area of ischaemia is more predictive than severity of ischaemia in a given segment.
A surgical risk calculator has been developed by the American College of Surgeons National Surgical Quality Improvement Program (ACS NSQIP) using 21 preoperative factors.[15] These factors include 20 patient characteristics (age, sex, functional class, emergency case, American Society of Anaesthesiologists [ASA] class, corticosteroid use, presence of ascites within 30 days, systemic sepsis, ventilator dependence, presence of disseminated cancer, diabetes mellitus, hypertension, heart failure within 30 days, presence of dyspnoea, current smoking status, history of severe COPD, need for dialysis, presence of acute renal failure, height, and weight) and type of procedure. This model had excellent performance for mortality (c-statistic = 0.944; Brier score = 0.011 [where scores approaching 0 are better]), morbidity (c-statistic = 0.816; Brier score = 0.069), and 6 additional complications (c-statistics >0.8).[15] The ACS NSQIP surgical risk calculator offers surgeons the ability to quickly and easily estimate important, patient-specific postoperative risks and present the information in a patient-friendly format.
Perioperative therapy includes:
Preoperative revascularisation with coronary artery bypass grafting or percutaneous coronary intervention
Beta-blockers
Statins.
Alpha-2 agonists are not recommended for perioperative cardiac risk reduction.[16] In one blinded, randomized trial comparing low-dose clonidine with placebo in 10,010 people with, or at risk of, atherosclerotic disease who were undergoing noncardiac surgery, clonidine did not reduce the rate of the composite outcome of death or nonfatal myocardial infarction.[17] In addition, clonidine was found to increase the risk of clinically important hypotension and nonfatal cardiac arrest.
Angiography and revascularisation before non-cardiac surgery[6]
Indicated in patients with stable angina who have significant left main coronary artery stenosis; 3-vessel disease (survival benefit is greater when left ventricular ejection fraction <0.50); or 2-vessel disease with significant proximal left anterior descending stenosis and either an ejection fraction <0.50 or a demonstrable ischaemia on non-invasive evaluation.
Recommended in patients with unstable angina or non-ST-segment elevation myocardial infarction (MI), or with acute ST-elevation MI.
Not routinely indicated in patients with stable coronary artery disease (CAD). Several randomised trials have shown that preoperative coronary artery revascularisation before elective major vascular surgery does not alter the long-term outcome in patients with stable CAD. Furthermore, preoperative percutaneous coronary intervention did not reduce the risk of death, MI, or other major cardiovascular events when added to optimal medical therapy.[9][14]
A coronary stent is used in most percutaneous revascularisation procedures. In this case, further delay in non-cardiac surgery may be beneficial. Elective non-cardiac surgery is not recommended within 4 to 6 weeks of bare-metal coronary stent implantation or within 6 to 12 months of drug-eluting coronary stent implantation; or in patients who need to discontinue P2Y12 inhibitor therapy (e.g., clopidogrel, prasugrel, ticagrelor) or aspirin and thienopyridine therapy perioperatively.[6] The incremental risk of non-cardiac surgery on adverse cardiac events among post-stent patients is highest in the initial 6 months following stent implantation and stabilises at 1.0% after 6 months. Elective, high-risk, inpatient surgery, and patients with a drug-eluting stent, may benefit most from a 6-month delay after stent placement.[18]
The perioperative use of beta-blocker therapy during non-cardiac surgery may be beneficial in reducing ischaemia, risk of myocardial infarction (MI), and death in patients with known coronary artery disease.[6][19]
Beta-blocker therapy
Should be continued in patients being treated for angina, symptomatic arrhythmias, hypertension, or other American College of Cardiology/American Heart Association (ACC/AHA) class I guideline indications.
In patients with intermediate- or high-risk myocardial ischaemia noted in preoperative risk stratification tests, it may be reasonable to begin perioperative beta-blockers.
Routinely giving high-dose beta-blockers in the absence of dose titration is not useful and may be harmful to patients not taking beta-blockers who are undergoing non-cardiac surgery.
In patients in whom beta-blocker therapy is initiated, it may be reasonable to begin perioperative beta-blockers long enough in advance to assess safety and tolerability, preferably 2 or more days (up to 30 days) before surgery. Beta-blocker therapy should not be started on the day of surgery.
Therapy can be started with metoprolol 25 mg orally given twice daily, and increased to maintain the heart rate <60 bpm, or bisoprolol 5 to 10 mg orally once daily. It should be started 2 to 30 days before elective surgery and continued for 48 hours to 7 days after surgery.
Perioperative extended-release metoprolol has been shown to reduce the risk of MI, cardiac revascularisation and clinically significant atrial fibrillation 30 days after randomisation, compared with placebo. However, available evidence suggests that the use of beta-blockers in patients with, or at risk of, atherosclerotic disease, may result in significant excess risk of death, stroke, and clinically significant hypotension and bradycardia. Caution is therefore recommended with the routine use of beta-blockers.[5][19][20]
The available evidence suggests a protective effect of perioperative statin use on cardiac complications during non-cardiac surgery. Statin therapy results in a 44% reduction in mortality after non-cardiac surgery.[21]
Therapy should be continued in patients treated with statins who are scheduled for non-cardiac surgery.
Statin therapy is reasonable in patients undergoing vascular surgery regardless of the cardiac risk. For patients not on statin therapy who are undergoing urgent or emergent major vascular surgery, statins should be initiated before surgery if possible.[6] However, the European Society of Cardiology (ESC) only recommends perioperative statins for patients with an existing indication for statins due to unclear evidence for their routine use.[5]
For perioperative myocardial ischaemia
Intraoperative and postoperative ST-segment monitoring can be useful to monitor patients with known coronary artery disease or those undergoing vascular surgery.
For perioperative myocardial infarction:
Postoperative troponin measurement is recommended in patients with ECG changes, or with chest pain typical of acute coronary syndrome.[6]
The ESC recommends surveillance with high-sensitivity cardiac troponin T/I (hs-cTn T/I) in patients with cardiovascular disease, cardiovascular risk factors (including age ≥65 years), or symptoms suggestive of cardiovascular disease undergoing intermediate- or high-risk non-cardiac surgery. Hs-cTn T/I should be measured before surgery and at 24 hours and 48 hours after surgery.[5]
Symptomatic aortic stenosis
Severe aortic stenosis poses a significant risk for non-cardiac surgery. Guidelines suggest that elective non-cardiac surgery should generally be postponed or cancelled in such patients.[6]
Patients require aortic valve replacement before elective but necessary non-cardiac surgery.
Asymptomatic aortic stenosis
If the aortic stenosis is severe but asymptomatic, the surgery should preferably be postponed or cancelled if the valve has not been evaluated within the previous year.
In patients who refuse cardiac surgery, or who are otherwise not candidates for aortic valve replacement, non-cardiac surgery has a mortality risk of approximately 10%. If a patient is not a candidate for valve replacement, percutaneous balloon aortic valvuloplasty may be reasonable as a bridge to surgery in: haemodynamically unstable adult patients with aortic stenosis, who are at high risk for aortic valve replacement surgery; and adult patients with aortic stenosis in whom aortic valve replacement cannot be performed because of serious comorbid conditions. Percutaneous valve replacement is available as a therapeutic modality.
Pulmonary hypertension
Guidelines recommend assessing patients for intermediate-risk and high-risk features of pulmonary hypertension that increase the risk of perioperative complications. Patients should be assessed by an anaesthesiologist and an expert in pulmonary hypertension, where feasible.[22]
Patients on psychotropic medications[23]
Antidepressant treatment for chronically depressed patients should not be discontinued prior to anaesthesia.
Patients chronically treated with a tricyclic antidepressant should undergo cardiac evaluation prior to anaesthesia.
Irreversible monoamine oxidase inhibitors (MAOIs) should be discontinued at least 2 weeks prior to anaesthesia. In order to avoid relapse of underlying disease, medication should be changed to a reversible MAOI.
The incidence of postoperative confusion is significantly higher in schizophrenic patients if medication is discontinued prior to surgery. Thus, antipsychotic medication should be continued perioperatively in patients with chronic schizophrenia.
Lithium administration should be stopped 72 hours before surgery. It can be restarted afterwards if the patient has normal ranges of electrolytes, is hemodynamically stable, and is able to eat and drink.
Preoperative assessment of older surgical patient[24]
Data from the US National Hospital Discharge Survey demonstrate increasing hospital utilisation by older people.[25][26] In response to the need for quality improvement in perioperative geriatric surgical care, the American College of Surgeons National Surgical Quality Improvement Program and the American Geriatrics Society formulated practice guidelines to ensure optimal care of the geriatric surgical patient.[24] The guideline development panel prioritised a number of preoperative domains specific to older individuals (e.g., cognitive impairment, frailty, polypharmacy) and, additionally, issues commonly encountered in this population (e.g., risk of malnutrition, lack of family or social support). Consensus statements and evidence-based recommendations for improving the preoperative assessment of the geriatric surgical patient were summarised in a checklist:[24]
Perform a complete history and physical examination
Assess cognitive ability and capacity to understand the anticipated surgery
Screen for depression
Identify and document risk factors for developing postoperative delirium
Screen for alcohol and other substance abuse/dependence
Perform a preoperative cardiac evaluation according to local guidance for patients undergoing non-cardiac surgery (e.g., American College of Cardiology/American Heart Association, European Society of Cardiology/ European Society of Anaesthesiology)[6][27]
Identify risk factors for postoperative pulmonary complications and implement preventive strategies
Document functional status and history of falls
Determine baseline frailty score
Evaluate nutritional status and consider preoperative interventions if the patient is at severe nutritional risk
Document medication history and consider appropriate perioperative adjustments. Monitor for polypharmacy
Determine the patient's treatment goals and expectations in the context of the possible treatment outcomes
Determine the patient's family and social support system
Order appropriate preoperative diagnostic tests focused on older patients.
(Adapated from: Chow WB, Rosenthal RA, Merkow RP, et al. Optimal preoperative assessment of the geriatric surgical patient: a best practices guideline from the American College of Surgeons National Surgical Quality Improvement Program and the American Geriatrics Society. J Am Coll Surg. 2012;215:453-466.[24])
Urgency of non-cardiac surgery[6]
It is important to determine the urgency of non-cardiac surgery. In many cases, patient- or surgery-specific factors dictate immediate surgery and may not allow for further cardiac assessment or treatment. Perioperative medical management, surveillance, and postoperative risk stratification is appropriate in these cases.
Cardiac testing not required[6]
Patients with bypass surgery in the previous 5 years or percutaneous coronary intervention from 6 months to 5 years previously, and no clinical evidence of ischaemia, generally have low risk of cardiac complications from surgery. They may proceed without further testing, particularly if they are functionally very active and asymptomatic.
Patients with favourable invasive/non-invasive testing in the previous 2 years generally require no further cardiac workup, if they have been asymptomatic since the test and are functionally active.
Non-invasive cardiac testing[6]
Results of non-invasive testing can be used to define further management, including intensified medical therapy or the decision to proceed directly with surgery or cardiac catheterisation. Cardiac catheterisation may lead to coronary revascularisation and is particularly justifiable when it is likely to improve the patient's long-term prognosis (e.g., in those with left main stem stenosis, or 3-vessel disease and impaired left ventricular function).
Poor functional capacity or a combination of high-risk surgery and moderate functional capacity, in a patient with intermediate clinical predictors of cardiac risk, may mean there are benefits to further non-invasive cardiac testing.
In highly functional asymptomatic patients, management will rarely be changed on the basis of results of any further cardiovascular testing. It is therefore appropriate to proceed with the planned surgery. Estimation of functional status is an important aspect of the guidelines.
Risk of non-cardiac surgery according to clinical predictors of cardiac risk, functional capacity, and type of surgery[6]
Patients with minor or no clinical predictors of cardiac risk and moderate or excellent functional capacity can safely undergo non-cardiac surgery.
Patients with intermediate clinical predictors of cardiac risk and moderate or excellent functional capacity can generally undergo low- or intermediate-risk surgery with low event rates.
Patients with unstable coronary syndrome, decompensated heart failure, symptomatic arrhythmias, or severe valvular heart disease who are scheduled for elective non-cardiac surgery should have surgery cancelled or delayed until the cardiac problem is clarified and treated.
The type of surgery may itself identify a patient with a greater likelihood of underlying heart disease and higher perioperative morbidity and mortality. Perhaps the most extensively studied example is vascular surgery, in which underlying coronary and cerebrovascular disease is present in a substantial portion of patients. If the patient is undergoing vascular surgery, studies suggest that testing should be considered only if it will change management. Other types of surgery may be associated with similar risks to vascular surgery, but have not been studied extensively.
Routine coronary revascularisation is not recommended before non-cardiac surgery to reduce perioperative cardiac events.[Figure caption and citation for the preceding image starts]: Cardiac evaluation and care algorithm for non-cardiac surgeryAdapted from Fleisher LA, et al. J Am Coll Cardiol. 2014;64:e77-e137 [Citation ends].
The ESC recommends an accurate focused history, physical examination, and preoperative risk assessment for all patients. The urgency of the surgery and patient and surgery-related risk factors determine the extent of further preoperative testing.[5] If time allows, treatment of cardiovascular disease (CVD) and cardiovascular risk factors should be optimised before non-cardiac surgery.
Assess urgency of surgical procedure[5]
In urgent cases, patient- or surgery-specific factors dictate the strategy and do not allow further cardiac testing or treatment. In these cases, the attending physician provides recommendations on perioperative medical management, surveillance for cardiac events, and continuation of chronic cardiovascular medical therapy.
If the procedure is time-sensitive but not urgent, cardiac testing should be individualised with multidisciplinary consultation. If time allows, assess as per elective non-cardiac surgery.
Elective non-cardiac surgery: patients aged <65 years with no CVD or cardiovascular risk factors[5]
If the procedure is low- or intermediate-risk, no further assessment is needed.
If the procedure is high-risk, consider ECG and biomarkers in patients aged>45 years.
Patients with a family history of genetic cardiomyopathy should be evaluated with an ECG and echocardiogram, regardless of symptoms or age.
Elective non-cardiac surgery: patients aged ≥65 years, or patients with cardiovascular risk factors or established CVD[5]
If the procedure is low-risk, no further assessment is needed. Consider disease-specific recommendations in patients with established CVD.
If the procedure is intermediate- or high-risk, perform ECG and measure biomarkers. Consider assessing functional capacity.
In patients with established CVD undergoing a high-risk procedure, decision on whether to proceed with surgery should be made with following multidisciplinary consultation, including cardiology, taking into account individual patient goals and preferences. Non-cardiac surgery should probably be avoided in patients with severe heart failure, cardiogenic shock, severe pulmonary hypertension, or severe frailty.
Further assessment for patients with signs or symptoms suggestive of CVD[5]
Newly detected murmurs: perform echocardiogram in patients with murmur suggestive of significant pathology prior to high-risk non-cardiac surgery, regardless of symptoms, and prior to any non-cardiac surgery in a patient with murmur and symptoms of CVD.
Chest pain: further diagnostic workup is recommended prior to elective non-cardiac surgery for patients with chest pain or other symptoms suggestive of coronary artery disease. If the patient needs acute surgery, multidisciplinary assessment is used to choose treatment with the lowest overall risk.
Unexplained dyspnoea and/or peripheral oedema: perform ECG and measure NT-proBNP/BNP before non-cardiac surgery. If NT-proBNP/BNP is elevated, perform echocardiogram.
Management of new or pre-existing cardiovascular conditions should be individualised, taking into account the preoperative risk and recommendations of relevant speciality guidelines.
These guidelines make the following recommendations for people ≥45 years of age (or adults 18 to 44 years of age with known significant cardiovascular disease) undergoing non-cardiac surgery:
Not delaying surgery for a preoperative cardiac risk assessment in patients who require emergency surgery.[28]
Undertaking preoperative cardiac risk assessment only if the patients' history or physical examination suggests there is a potential undiagnosed severe obstructive intracardiac abnormality, severe pulmonary hypertension, or an unstable cardiovascular condition in those requiring urgent or semi-urgent surgery.[28]
Preoperative cardiac risk assessment in patients who undergoing elective non-cardiac surgery.[28]
Measuring N-terminal pro-brain natriuraetic peptide (NT-proBNP) or BNP before non-cardiac surgery to enhance perioperative cardiac risk estimation in patients ages 65 years or older, are 45 to 64 years of age with significant cardiovascular disease, or have an Revised Cardiac Risk Index (RCRI) score ≥ 1.[28]
Withholding ACE inhibitor/angiotensin receptor blockers (ARBs) starting 24 hours before non-cardiac surgery in patients treated chronically with an ACE inhibitor/ARB.[28]
In addition, these guidelines recommend against:
Performing preoperative resting echocardiography, preoperative coronary computed tomography angiography, or preoperative exercise stress to enhance perioperative cardiac risk estimation.[28]
The continuation of aspirin to prevent perioperative cardiac events, except in patients with a recent coronary artery stent and patients undergoing carotid endarterectomy.[28]
Beta-blocker initiation within 24 hours before non-cardiac surgery, which is consistent with other national guidelines.[28]
Preoperative prophylactic coronary revascularisation for patients with stable coronary artery disease who undergo non--cardiac surgery.[28]
[Figure caption and citation for the preceding image starts]: Preoperative risk assessment and postoperative monitoring flow diagram. If suspected undiagnosed severe obstructive intracardiac abnormality or severe PHTN a preoperative echocardiogram is recommended. If possible unstable cardiac condition (e.g., unstable angina) then risks and benefits of delaying, canceling, or proceeding with surgery need to be discussed with the patient. RCRI score (each worth 1 point): history of coronary artery disease, cerebrovascular disease, congestive heart failure, preoperative insulin use, preoperative creatinine > 177 micromoles/L, and high-risk surgery (i.e., intraperitoneal, intrathoracic, or suprainguinal vascular surgery). BNP, brain natriuretic peptide; ECG, electrocardiogram; NT-proBNP, N-terminal pro-brain natriuretic peptide; PACU, postanesthesia care unit; PHTN, pulmonary hypertension; RCRI, Revised Cardiac Risk Index.Adapted from Duceppe E, et al. Can J Cardiol. 2017;33(1):17-32 [Citation ends].
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