VCU Pauley Heart Center, Virginia Commonwealth University, Richmond, Virginia.
VCU Pauley Heart Center, Virginia Commonwealth University, Richmond, Virginia.
Am J Cardiol. 2021 May 1;146:107-114. doi: 10.1016/j.amjcard.2021.01.030. Epub 2021 Feb 1.
Exercise testing represents the preferred stress modality for individuals undergoing evaluation of suspected myocardial ischemia. Patients with limited functional status may be unable to achieve an adequate exercise stress, thus influencing the diagnostic sensitivity of the results. The Duke Activity Status Index (DASI) is a clinically applicable tool to estimate exercise capacity. The purpose of the current study was to assess the utility of the DASI to identify patients unable to achieve an adequate exercise stress result. Patients referred for exercise stress testing were administered the DASI pre-exercise. Baseline characteristics and exercise variables were evaluated including DASI-metabolic equivalents (DASI-METs), peak METs, exercise time (ET), and %-predicted maximal heart rate (%PMHR). Criteria for determining adequate exercise stress was defined as ≥85%PMHR or ≥ 5-METs at peak exercise. In 608 cardiovascular stress tests performed during the study period; 314 were exercise stress. The median DASI-METs (8.4 [interquartile range; 6.7 to 9.9]) was associated with estimated peak exercise METs (R=0.50, p <0.001), ET (R=0.29, p <0.001), and %PMHR (R=0.19, p = 0.003). DASI-METs were different between those with < or ≥85%PMHR (7.9 [6.6-9.0] vs. 8.9 [7.1-9.9], P=0.025) and those with < or ≥5-METs (5.8 [4.6 to 6.6] versus 8.9 [7.3-9.9], p <0.001). Receiver operating characteristic curve analysis identified a DASI-MET threshold of ≤/>7.4 to optimally predict adequate exercise stress (sensitivity=93%, specificity=71%). In conclusion, the DASI correlates with peak METs, ET, and %PMHR among patients referred for exercise testing and can be used to identify patients with an increased likelihood of an inadequate stress test result.
运动试验是评估疑似心肌缺血患者的首选应激方式。功能状态有限的患者可能无法达到足够的运动应激,从而影响结果的诊断敏感性。杜克活动状态指数(DASI)是一种临床适用的工具,用于估计运动能力。本研究的目的是评估 DASI 识别无法达到足够运动应激结果的患者的效用。运动应激测试前,给患者进行 DASI 测试。评估了基线特征和运动变量,包括 DASI-代谢当量(DASI-METs)、峰值 METs、运动时间(ET)和预测最大心率的百分比(%PMHR)。确定足够运动应激的标准定义为峰值运动时达到≥85%PMHR 或≥5-METs。在研究期间进行的 608 次心血管运动测试中,有 314 次是运动应激。中位数 DASI-METs(8.4[四分位间距;6.7 至 9.9])与估计的峰值运动 METs(R=0.50,p<0.001)、ET(R=0.29,p<0.001)和%PMHR(R=0.19,p=0.003)相关。DASI-METs 在达到<或≥85%PMHR(7.9[6.6-9.0] 与 8.9[7.1-9.9],p=0.025)和达到<或≥5-METs(5.8[4.6 至 6.6] 与 8.9[7.3-9.9],p<0.001)的患者之间存在差异。受试者工作特征曲线分析确定 DASI-MET 截断值≤/>7.4 可最佳预测足够的运动应激(敏感性=93%,特异性=71%)。结论,DASI 与运动测试患者的峰值 METs、ET 和%PMHR 相关,可用于识别运动应激试验结果不充分的可能性增加的患者。