TY - JOUR
T1 - Assessment of functional capacity before major non-cardiac surgery
T2 - an international, prospective cohort study
AU - METS Study Investigators
AU - Wijeysundera, Duminda N.
AU - Pearse, Rupert M.
AU - Shulman, Mark A.
AU - Abbott, Tom E.F.
AU - Torres, Elizabeth
AU - Ambosta, Althea
AU - Croal, Bernard L.
AU - Granton, John T.
AU - Thorpe, Kevin E.
AU - Grocott, Michael P.W.
AU - Farrington, Catherine
AU - Myles, Paul S.
AU - Cuthbertson, Brian H.
AU - Wallace, Sophie
AU - Thompson, Bruce
AU - Ellis, Mathew
AU - Borg, Brigette
AU - Kerridge, Ross K.
AU - Douglas, Jeanene
AU - Brannan, John
AU - Pretto, Jeff
AU - Godsall, Guy
AU - Beauchamp, Nicola
AU - Allen, Sandra
AU - Kennedy, Ann
AU - Wright, Ewan
AU - Malherbe, Johan
AU - Ismail, Hilmy
AU - Riedel, Bernhard
AU - Melville, Andrew
AU - Sivakumar, Harry
AU - Murmane, Andrew
AU - Kenchington, Kay
AU - Kirabiyik, Yesim
AU - Gurunathan, Usha
AU - Stonell, Chris
AU - Brunello, Kate
AU - Steele, Katherine
AU - Tronstad, Oystein
AU - Masel, Philip
AU - Dent, Annette
AU - Smith, Emma
AU - Bodger, Alanna
AU - Abolfathi, Miriam
AU - Sivalingam, Pal
AU - Hall, Adrian
AU - Painter, Thomas W.
AU - Macklin, Simon
AU - Elliott, Adrian
AU - Carrera, Anna Maria
AU - Terblanche, Nico CS
AU - Pitt, Simon
AU - Samuel, Joanne
AU - Wilde, Chris
AU - Leslie, Kate
AU - MacCormick, Andrew
AU - Bramley, David
AU - Southcott, Anne Marie
AU - Grant, John
AU - Taylor, Hugh
AU - Bates, Samantha
AU - Towns, Miriam
AU - Tippett, Anna
AU - Marshall, Fiona
AU - Mazer, C. David
AU - Kunasingam, Janarthanee
AU - Yagnik, Anmol
AU - Crescini, Charmagne
AU - Yagnik, Sanjay
AU - McCartney, Colin JL
AU - Somascanthan, Priya
AU - Choi, Stephen
AU - Flores, Kathrina
AU - Au, Shelly
AU - Beattie, W. Scott
AU - Karkouti, Keyvan
AU - Clarke, Hance A.
AU - Jerath, Angela
AU - McCluskey, Stuart A.
AU - Wasowicz, Marcin
AU - Day, Lauren
AU - Pazmino-Canizares, Janneth
AU - Oh, Paul
AU - Belliard, Rene
AU - Lee, Leanna
AU - Dobson, Karen
AU - Chan, Vincent
AU - Brull, Richard
AU - Ami, Noam
AU - Stanbrook, Matthew
AU - Hagen, Katherine
AU - Campbell, Douglas
AU - Short, Timothy
AU - Van Der Westhuizen, Joreline
AU - Higgie, Kushlin
AU - Lindsay, Helen
AU - Jang, Ryan
AU - Wong, Chris
AU - McAllister, Davina
AU - Ali, Marlynn
AU - Kumar, Jonathan
AU - Waymouth, Ellen
AU - Kim, Chang Joon
AU - Dimech, Julian
AU - Lorimer, Michael
AU - Tai, Joyce
AU - Miller, Reuben
AU - Sara, Rachel
AU - Collingwood, Andrew
AU - Olliff, Sue
AU - Gabriel, Sharon
AU - Houston, Helen
AU - Dalley, Paul
AU - Hurford, Sally
AU - Hunt, Anna
AU - Andrews, Lynn
AU - Navarra, Leanlove
AU - Jason-Smith, Adelaide
AU - Thompson, Helen
AU - McMillan, Natalie
AU - Back, Geraldine
AU - Lum, Mark
AU - Martin, Daniel
AU - James, Sarah
AU - Filipe, Helder
AU - Pinto, Manuel
AU - Kynaston, Stephen
AU - Phull, Mandeep
AU - Beilstein, Christian
AU - Bodger, Pheobe
AU - Everingham, Kirsty
AU - Hu, Ying
AU - Niebrzegowska, Edyta
AU - Corriea, Carmen
AU - Creary, Thais
AU - Januszewska, Marta
AU - Ahmad, Tahania
AU - Whalley, Jan
AU - Haslop, Richard
AU - McNeil, Jane
AU - Brown, Alistair
AU - MacDonald, Neil
AU - Pakats, Mari Liis
AU - Greaves, Kathryn
AU - Jhanji, Shaman
AU - Raobaikady, Ravishanar
AU - Black, Ethel
AU - Rooms, Martin
AU - Lawrence, Helen
AU - Koutra, Maria
AU - Pirie, Katrina
AU - Gertsman, Michelle
AU - Jack, Sandy
AU - Celinski, Michael
AU - Levett, Denny
AU - Edwards, Mark
AU - Salmon, Karen
AU - Bolger, Clare
AU - Loughney, Lisa
AU - Seaward, Leanne
AU - Collins, Hannah
AU - Tyrell, Bryony
AU - Tantony, Natasha
AU - Golder, Kim
AU - Ackland, Gareth L.
AU - Stephens, R. C.M.
AU - Gallego-Paredes, Laura
AU - Reyes, Anna
AU - Gutierrez del Arroyo, Ana
AU - Raj, Ashok
AU - Lifford, Rhiannon
AU - Melo, Magda
AU - Mamdani, Muhammad
AU - Hillis, Graham
AU - Wijeysundera, Harindra C.
PY - 2018/6/30
Y1 - 2018/6/30
N2 - BACKGROUND: Functional capacity is an important component of risk assessment for major surgery. Doctors' clinical subjective assessment of patients' functional capacity has uncertain accuracy. We did a study to compare preoperative subjective assessment with alternative markers of fitness (cardiopulmonary exercise testing [CPET], scores on the Duke Activity Status Index [DASI] questionnaire, and serum N-terminal pro-B-type natriuretic peptide [NT pro-BNP] concentrations) for predicting death or complications after major elective non-cardiac surgery.METHODS: We did a multicentre, international, prospective cohort study at 25 hospitals: five in Canada, seven in the UK, ten in Australia, and three in New Zealand. We recruited adults aged at least 40 years who were scheduled for major non-cardiac surgery and deemed to have one or more risk factors for cardiac complications (eg, a history of heart failure, stroke, or diabetes) or coronary artery disease. Functional capacity was subjectively assessed in units of metabolic equivalents of tasks by the responsible anaesthesiologists in the preoperative assessment clinic, graded as poor (<4), moderate (4-10), or good (>10). All participants also completed the DASI questionnaire, underwent CPET to measure peak oxygen consumption, and had blood tests for measurement of NT pro-BNP concentrations. After surgery, patients had daily electrocardiograms and blood tests to measure troponin and creatinine concentrations until the third postoperative day or hospital discharge. The primary outcome was death or myocardial infarction within 30 days after surgery, assessed in all participants who underwent both CPET and surgery. Prognostic accuracy was assessed using logistic regression, receiver-operating-characteristic curves, and net risk reclassification.FINDINGS: Between March 1, 2013, and March 25, 2016, we included 1401 patients in the study. 28 (2%) of 1401 patients died or had a myocardial infarction within 30 days of surgery. Subjective assessment had 19·2% sensitivity (95% CI 14·2-25) and 94·7% specificity (93·2-95·9) for identifying the inability to attain four metabolic equivalents during CPET. Only DASI scores were associated with predicting the primary outcome (adjusted odds ratio 0·96, 95% CI 0·83-0·99; p=0·03).INTERPRETATION: Subjectively assessed functional capacity should not be used for preoperative risk evaluation. Clinicians could instead consider a measure such as DASI for cardiac risk assessment.FUNDING: Canadian Institutes of Health Research, Heart and Stroke Foundation of Canada, Ontario Ministry of Health and Long-Term Care, Ontario Ministry of Research, Innovation and Science, UK National Institute of Academic Anaesthesia, UK Clinical Research Collaboration, Australian and New Zealand College of Anaesthetists, and Monash University.
AB - BACKGROUND: Functional capacity is an important component of risk assessment for major surgery. Doctors' clinical subjective assessment of patients' functional capacity has uncertain accuracy. We did a study to compare preoperative subjective assessment with alternative markers of fitness (cardiopulmonary exercise testing [CPET], scores on the Duke Activity Status Index [DASI] questionnaire, and serum N-terminal pro-B-type natriuretic peptide [NT pro-BNP] concentrations) for predicting death or complications after major elective non-cardiac surgery.METHODS: We did a multicentre, international, prospective cohort study at 25 hospitals: five in Canada, seven in the UK, ten in Australia, and three in New Zealand. We recruited adults aged at least 40 years who were scheduled for major non-cardiac surgery and deemed to have one or more risk factors for cardiac complications (eg, a history of heart failure, stroke, or diabetes) or coronary artery disease. Functional capacity was subjectively assessed in units of metabolic equivalents of tasks by the responsible anaesthesiologists in the preoperative assessment clinic, graded as poor (<4), moderate (4-10), or good (>10). All participants also completed the DASI questionnaire, underwent CPET to measure peak oxygen consumption, and had blood tests for measurement of NT pro-BNP concentrations. After surgery, patients had daily electrocardiograms and blood tests to measure troponin and creatinine concentrations until the third postoperative day or hospital discharge. The primary outcome was death or myocardial infarction within 30 days after surgery, assessed in all participants who underwent both CPET and surgery. Prognostic accuracy was assessed using logistic regression, receiver-operating-characteristic curves, and net risk reclassification.FINDINGS: Between March 1, 2013, and March 25, 2016, we included 1401 patients in the study. 28 (2%) of 1401 patients died or had a myocardial infarction within 30 days of surgery. Subjective assessment had 19·2% sensitivity (95% CI 14·2-25) and 94·7% specificity (93·2-95·9) for identifying the inability to attain four metabolic equivalents during CPET. Only DASI scores were associated with predicting the primary outcome (adjusted odds ratio 0·96, 95% CI 0·83-0·99; p=0·03).INTERPRETATION: Subjectively assessed functional capacity should not be used for preoperative risk evaluation. Clinicians could instead consider a measure such as DASI for cardiac risk assessment.FUNDING: Canadian Institutes of Health Research, Heart and Stroke Foundation of Canada, Ontario Ministry of Health and Long-Term Care, Ontario Ministry of Research, Innovation and Science, UK National Institute of Academic Anaesthesia, UK Clinical Research Collaboration, Australian and New Zealand College of Anaesthetists, and Monash University.
KW - Aged
KW - Exercise Test
KW - Exercise Tolerance
KW - Female
KW - Health Status
KW - Humans
KW - Internationality
KW - Male
KW - Middle Aged
KW - Natriuretic Peptide, Brain/blood
KW - Peptide Fragments/blood
KW - Postoperative Complications/etiology
KW - Prospective Studies
KW - Risk Assessment
KW - Sensitivity and Specificity
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85049068862&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1016/S0140-6736(18)31131-0
DO - 10.1016/S0140-6736(18)31131-0
M3 - Article
C2 - 30070222
VL - 391
SP - 2631
EP - 2640
JO - Lancet
JF - Lancet
SN - 0140-6736
IS - 10140
ER -