Back Martin R, Leo Fabian, Cuthbertson David, Johnson Brad L, Shamesmd Murray L, Bandyk Dennis F
Division of Vascular & Endovascular Surgery, University of South Florida College of Medicine, the Surgical Service, James A. Haley Veterans Hospital, Tampa, FL, USA.
J Vasc Surg. 2004 Oct;40(4):752-60. doi: 10.1016/j.jvs.2004.07.038.
We sought to identify specific determinants of long-term cardiac events and survival in patients undergoing major arterial operations after preoperative cardiac risk stratification by American College of Cardiology/American Heart Association guidelines. A secondary goal was to define the potential long-term protective effect of previous coronary revascularization (coronary artery bypass grafting [CABG] or percutaneous coronary intervention [PCI]) in patients with vascular disease.
Four hundred fifty-nine patients underwent risk stratification (high, intermediate, low) before 534 consecutive elective or urgent (<24 hours after presentation) open cerebrovascular, aortic, or lower limb reconstruction procedures between August 1996 and January 2000. Long-term follow-up (mean, 56 +/- 14 months) was possible in 97% of patients. The Kaplan-Meier method was used for survival data. Long-term prognostic variables were identified with the multivariate Cox proportional hazards model and contingency table analysis censoring early (<30 days) perioperative deaths.
While 5-year survival was 72% for the overall cohort, cardiac causes accounted for only 24% of all deaths, and new cardiac events (myocardial infarction, congestive heart failure, arrhythmia, unstable angina, new coronary angiography, new CABG or PCI, cardiac death) affected only 4.6% of patients per year during follow-up. High cardiac risk stratification level (hazards ratio [HR], 2.2, 95% confidence interval [CI], 1.4-3.4), adverse perioperative cardiac events (myocardial infarction, congestive heart failure, ventricular arrhythmia; HR, 2.2; 95% CI, 1.2-4.1), and age (HR, 0.33; 95% CI, 0.2-0.6) were independently prognostic for latemortality. Preoperative cardiac risk levels also correlated with new cardiac event rates ( P < .01) and late cardiac mortality ( P = .02). Modestly improved survival in patients who had undergone CABG or PCI less than 5 years before vascular operations compared with those who had undergone revascularization 5 or more years previously and those at high risk without previous coronary intervention (73% vs 58% vs 62% 5-year survival; P = .02) could be demonstrated with univariate testing, but not with multivariate analysis. Type of operation, urgency, noncardiac complications, and presence of diabetes did not affect long-term survival.
Despite cardiac events being a less common cause of late mortality after vascular surgery, perioperative cardiac factors (age, preoperative risk level, early cardiac complications) are the primary determinants of patient longevity. Patients undergoing more recent (<5 years) CABG or PCI before vascular surgery do not have an obvious survival advantage compared with patients at high cardiac risk without previous coronary interventions.
我们试图通过美国心脏病学会/美国心脏协会指南对术前心脏风险进行分层,确定接受主要动脉手术患者长期心脏事件和生存的特定决定因素。第二个目标是明确既往冠状动脉血运重建术(冠状动脉旁路移植术[CABG]或经皮冠状动脉介入治疗[PCI])对血管疾病患者的潜在长期保护作用。
1996年8月至2000年1月期间,459例患者在连续534例择期或紧急(就诊后<24小时)的开放性脑血管、主动脉或下肢重建手术前进行了风险分层(高、中、低)。97%的患者获得了长期随访(平均56±14个月)。生存数据采用Kaplan-Meier法。通过多变量Cox比例风险模型和列联表分析对早期(<30天)围手术期死亡进行截尾,确定长期预后变量。
整个队列的5年生存率为72%,心脏原因仅占所有死亡的24%,新的心脏事件(心肌梗死、充血性心力衰竭、心律失常、不稳定型心绞痛、新的冠状动脉造影、新的CABG或PCI、心源性死亡)在随访期间每年仅影响4.6%的患者。高心脏风险分层水平(风险比[HR],2.2,95%置信区间[CI],1.4 - 3.4)、围手术期不良心脏事件(心肌梗死、充血性心力衰竭、室性心律失常;HR,2.2;95% CI,1.2 - 4.1)和年龄(HR,0.33;95% CI,0.2 - 0.6)是晚期死亡的独立预后因素。术前心脏风险水平也与新的心脏事件发生率(P <.01)和晚期心脏死亡率(P =.02)相关。与血管手术前5年或更长时间接受血运重建的患者以及未接受过冠状动脉干预的高风险患者相比,血管手术前不到5年接受CABG或PCI的患者生存率适度提高(5年生存率分别为73%、58%、62%;P =.02),单变量检验可以证明这一点,但多变量分析未显示。手术类型、紧急程度、非心脏并发症和糖尿病的存在不影响长期生存。
尽管心脏事件是血管手术后晚期死亡的较不常见原因,但围手术期心脏因素(年龄、术前风险水平、早期心脏并发症)是患者寿命的主要决定因素。与未接受过冠状动脉干预的高心脏风险患者相比,血管手术前最近(<5年)接受CABG或PCI的患者没有明显的生存优势。