Alshair Fahad M, Baghaffar Abdullah H, Fatani Mazin A, Alqahtani Anas K, Al Assiri Abdullah K, Alsulymani Badr M, Sanedi Abdullah M, Bamousa Saud M
Cardiac Surgery, King Abdulaziz University Hospital, Jeddah, SAU.
Medicine, King Abdulaziz University, Jeddah, SAU.
Cureus. 2024 Jul 28;16(7):e65567. doi: 10.7759/cureus.65567. eCollection 2024 Jul.
Background Diabetic patients present a majority of patients undergoing surgical revascularization. Hyperglycemia is associated with increased adverse events. Glycosylated hemoglobin (HbA1c) is an effective biological marker for long-term glycemic control. As a result, there is an increased trend in its use as a predictor of adverse outcomes. This study aims to assess the impact of elevated HbA1c on the occurrence of postoperative complications after coronary artery bypass grafting (CABG). Methods We conducted a retrospective review of medical records from January 2015 to December 2022 for adult patients who underwent isolated CABG. We assessed patient demographics, medication, laboratory results, HbA1c results, and clinical data. The separate statistical models were designed to assess the predictors for the development of postoperative complications. Results This retrospective single-center study was conducted on 289 consecutive adult patients who underwent on-pump CABG. Patient demographics showed that uncontrolled HbA1c was more in females (p=0.022), and hemodialysis patients (p=0.018). Across different levels of HbA1C, there were no significant differences in terms of the incidence of postoperative complications (p=0.788 for infection, p=0.372 for the need for blood transfusion, p=0.721 for heart failure, p=0.692 for arrhythmia, and p=0.712 for death). HbA1c had no predictive value for postoperative complications as indicated by multivariate and stepwise analysis in a separate model for each complication with receiver operator characteristics curves of each model showing similar strength of both multivariate and stepwise models. Conclusions In our data, elevated preoperative HbA1c had no predictive value for early complications and intermediate postoperative outcomes. We recommend that surgery should proceed without delay, even if patients have elevated HbA1C levels. As for elective patients with low-risk features and anatomy, optimizing preoperative glycemic control can be considered.
糖尿病患者占接受外科血管重建术患者的大多数。高血糖与不良事件增加相关。糖化血红蛋白(HbA1c)是长期血糖控制的有效生物学标志物。因此,将其用作不良结局预测指标的趋势有所增加。本研究旨在评估HbA1c升高对冠状动脉旁路移植术(CABG)后术后并发症发生的影响。
我们对2015年1月至2022年12月期间接受单纯CABG的成年患者的病历进行了回顾性分析。我们评估了患者的人口统计学特征、用药情况、实验室检查结果、HbA1c结果和临床数据。设计了单独的统计模型来评估术后并发症发生的预测因素。
这项回顾性单中心研究对289例连续接受体外循环CABG的成年患者进行。患者人口统计学特征显示,女性(p = 0.022)和血液透析患者(p = 0.018)中未控制的HbA1c更多。在不同水平的HbA1C中,术后并发症的发生率没有显著差异(感染p = 0.788,输血需求p = 0.372,心力衰竭p = 0.721,心律失常p = 0.692,死亡p = 0.712)。在每个并发症的单独模型中,多变量和逐步分析表明HbA1c对术后并发症没有预测价值,每个模型的受试者工作特征曲线显示多变量和逐步模型的强度相似。
在我们的数据中,术前HbA1c升高对早期并发症和术后中期结局没有预测价值。我们建议即使患者HbA1C水平升高,手术也应立即进行。对于具有低风险特征和解剖结构的择期患者,可以考虑优化术前血糖控制。