Department of Anesthesiology, Yale University School of Medicine, New Haven, CT 06520-8051, USA.
Anesth Analg. 2012 Jan;114(1):205-14. doi: 10.1213/ANE.0b013e318239c4c1. Epub 2011 Nov 10.
American College of Cardiology/American Heart Association guidelines describe the perioperative evaluation as "a unique opportunity to identify patients with hypertension"; however, factors such as anticipatory stress or medication noncompliance may induce a bias toward higher blood pressure, leaving clinicians unsure about how to interpret preoperative hypertension. Information describing the relationship between preoperative intake blood pressure and primary care measurements could help anesthesiologists make primary care referrals for improved blood pressure control in an evidence-based fashion. We hypothesized that the preoperative examination provides a useful basis for initiating primary care blood pressure referral.
We analyzed retrospective data on 2807 patients who arrived from home for surgery and who were subsequently evaluated within 6 months after surgery in the primary care center of the same institution. After descriptive analysis, we conducted multiple linear regression analysis to identify day-of-surgery (DOS) factors associated with subsequent primary care blood pressure. We calculated the sensitivity, specificity, and positive and negative predictive value of different blood pressure referral thresholds using both a single-measurement and a 2-stage screen incorporating recent preoperative and DOS measurements for identifying patients with subsequently elevated primary care blood pressure.
DOS systolic blood pressure (SBP) was higher than subsequent primary care SBP by a mean bias of 5.5 mm Hg (95% limits of agreement + 43.8 to -32.8). DOS diastolic blood pressure (DBP) was higher than subsequent primary care DBP by a mean bias of 1.5 mm Hg (95% limits of agreement +13.0 to -10.0). Linear regression of DOS factors explained 19% of the variability in primary care SBP and 29% of the variability in DBP. Accounting for the observed bias, a 2-stage SBP referral screen requiring preoperative clinic SBP ≥140 mm Hg and DOS SBP ≥146 mm Hg had 95.9% estimated specificity (95% confidence interval [CI] 94.4 to 97.0) for identifying subsequent primary care SBP ≥140 mm Hg and estimated sensitivity of 26.8% (95% CI 22.0 to 32.0). A similarly high specificity using a single DOS SBP required a threshold SBP ≥160 mm Hg, for which estimated specificity was 95.2% (95% CI 94.2 to 96.1). For DBP, a presenting DOS DBP ≥92 mm Hg had 95.7% specificity (95% CI 94.8 to 96.4) for subsequent primary care DBP ≥90 mm Hg with a sensitivity of 18.8% (95% CI 14.4 to 24.0).
A small bias toward higher DOS blood pressures relative to subsequent primary care measurements was observed. DOS factors predicted only a small proportion of the observed variation. Accounting for the observed bias, a 2-stage SBP threshold and a single-reading DBP threshold were highly specific though insensitive for identifying subsequent primary care blood pressure elevation.
美国心脏病学会/美国心脏协会指南将围手术期评估描述为“识别高血压患者的独特机会”;然而,预期性应激或药物依从性差等因素可能导致血压升高的偏见,使临床医生不确定如何解释术前高血压。描述术前摄入血压与初级保健测量之间关系的信息,可以帮助麻醉师以循证的方式为改善血压控制转介初级保健。我们假设术前检查为启动初级保健血压转介提供了有用的依据。
我们对 2807 名从家中前来接受手术的患者进行了回顾性数据分析,这些患者随后在同一机构的初级保健中心进行了术后 6 个月的评估。在描述性分析之后,我们进行了多元线性回归分析,以确定与术后血压相关的手术日(DOS)因素。我们使用单次测量和包含最近术前和 DOS 测量的两阶段筛查来计算不同血压转介阈值的敏感性、特异性以及阳性和阴性预测值,以识别随后出现的高血压患者。
DOS 收缩压(SBP)比随后的初级保健 SBP 高平均偏差 5.5mmHg(95%置信区间为+43.8 至-32.8)。DOS 舒张压(DBP)比随后的初级保健 DBP 高平均偏差 1.5mmHg(95%置信区间为+13.0 至-10.0)。DOS 因素的线性回归解释了初级保健 SBP 变异性的 19%和 DBP 变异性的 29%。考虑到观察到的偏差,需要术前诊所 SBP≥140mmHg 和 DOS SBP≥146mmHg 的两阶段 SBP 转介筛查,对识别随后的初级保健 SBP≥140mmHg 的特异性估计为 95.9%(95%置信区间为 94.4 至 97.0),敏感性估计为 26.8%(95%置信区间为 22.0 至 32.0)。同样,使用 DOS SBP 的单一阈值需要≥160mmHg,其特异性估计为 95.2%(95%置信区间为 94.2 至 96.1)。对于 DBP,DOS DBP≥92mmHg 对随后的初级保健 DBP≥90mmHg 的特异性为 95.7%(95%置信区间为 94.8 至 96.4),敏感性为 18.8%(95%置信区间为 14.4 至 24.0)。
与随后的初级保健测量相比,DOS 血压存在轻微的升高趋势。DOS 因素仅能预测观察到的变化的一小部分。考虑到观察到的偏差,两阶段 SBP 阈值和单次读数 DBP 阈值对于识别随后的初级保健血压升高具有高度特异性,但敏感性较低。