Valadkhani Arman, Gupta Anil, Cauli Giordano, Nordström Johan L, Rohi Ayda, Tufexis Panos, Hällsjö Sander Caroline, Jacobsson Martin, Bell Max
From Department of Perioperative Medicine and Intensive Care (PMI), Karolinska University Hospital, Stockholm, Sweden.
Department of Pharmacology and Physiology, Karolinska Institutet, Stockholm, Sweden.
Anesth Analg. 2025 Jul 1;141(1):5-15. doi: 10.1213/ANE.0000000000007379. Epub 2025 Feb 20.
Intraoperative hypotension (IOH) and tachycardia are associated with perioperative myocardial injury (PMI), and thereby increased postoperative mortality. Patients undergoing vascular surgery are specifically at risk of developing cardiac complications. This study aimed to explore the association between different thresholds for IOH and tachycardia, and PMI. It also aimed to explore which threshold for IOH and tachycardia best predicts PMI.
In this single-center prospective observational study, high-sensitivity cardiac troponin T was measured preoperatively and at 4, 24, and 48 hours after vascular surgery. Absolute and relative thresholds were used to define intraoperative systolic, mean, and diastolic arterial hypotension, measured every 15 seconds by invasive arterial pressure monitoring and heart rate using the Philips IntelliVue X3 monitor. Decision tree machine-learning (ML) models were used to explore which thresholds for IOH and tachycardia best predict PMI. Clinical utility and transparency were prioritized over maximizing the performance of the ML model and therefore a white-box model was used.
In all, 498 patients were included in the study. Ninety-nine patients (20%) had PMI. Significant associations were found between IOH and PMI using both absolute and relative thresholds for systolic, mean, and diastolic arterial pressure. Absolute thresholds based on diastolic arterial pressure had the strongest correlation with PMI and yielded greater statistical significance. The threshold that was most predictive of PMI was an absolute diastolic arterial pressure <44 mm Hg. The prediction model with the absolute threshold of diastolic arterial pressure <44 mm Hg had a macro average F1 score of 0.67 and a weighted average F1 score of 0.76. No association was found between tachycardia and PMI.
We found that an absolute, not relative, IOH threshold based on diastolic arterial pressure, and not systolic or mean arterial pressure, or tachycardia, was most predictive of PMI.
术中低血压(IOH)和心动过速与围手术期心肌损伤(PMI)相关,进而增加术后死亡率。接受血管手术的患者尤其有发生心脏并发症的风险。本研究旨在探讨IOH和心动过速的不同阈值与PMI之间的关联。它还旨在探讨IOH和心动过速的哪个阈值最能预测PMI。
在这项单中心前瞻性观察研究中,术前以及血管手术后4、24和48小时测量高敏心肌肌钙蛋白T。使用绝对和相对阈值来定义术中收缩压、平均动脉压和舒张压低血压,通过有创动脉压监测每15秒测量一次,使用飞利浦IntelliVue X3监护仪测量心率。使用决策树机器学习(ML)模型来探讨IOH和心动过速的哪些阈值最能预测PMI。临床实用性和透明度优先于最大化ML模型的性能,因此使用了白盒模型。
该研究共纳入498例患者。99例患者(20%)发生PMI。使用收缩压、平均动脉压和舒张压的绝对和相对阈值均发现IOH与PMI之间存在显著关联。基于舒张压的绝对阈值与PMI的相关性最强,且具有更大的统计学意义。最能预测PMI的阈值是绝对舒张压<44 mmHg。绝对舒张压阈值<44 mmHg的预测模型的宏平均F1分数为0.67,加权平均F1分数为0.76。未发现心动过速与PMI之间存在关联。
我们发现,基于舒张压而非收缩压或平均动脉压或心动过速的绝对(而非相对)IOH阈值最能预测PMI。