(Circulation. 1999;100:II-119.)
© 1999 American Heart Association, Inc.
Surgery for Coronary Artery Disease |
From the Departments of Surgery (M.A., H.M.S., E.A.R.) and Medicine (W.W., J.T.B., M.P.), Columbia University College of Physicians and Surgeons, New York, NY.
Correspondence to Michael Argenziano, MD, c/o Eric A. Rose, MD, Division of Cardiothoracic Surgery, Milstein Hospital, Room 7-435, 177 Fort Washington Ave, New York, NY 10032. E-mail ma66{at}columbia.edu
BackgroundPreoperative characteristics may influence morbidity and mortality in patients undergoing coronary artery bypass grafting (CABG). The CABG Patch Trial was designed to assess the impact of prophylactic insertion of an implantable cardioverter-defibrillator in patients undergoing high-risk CABG. This database was used to investigate the influence of symptomatic congestive heart failure (CHF) and angina on morbidity and mortality in CABG patients with ventricular dysfunction.
Methods and ResultsData were analyzed for 900 randomized
patients with an ejection fraction
35% and an abnormal
signal-averaged ECG. Single-variable and stepwise multiple logistic
regression analyses were used for mortality and length-of-stay
(LOS) data. Severity of CHF and angina was graded by the New York Heart
Association (NYHA) and Canadian Cardiovascular Society
(CCS) classifications, respectively. Perioperative
mortality was 3.5% in 454 patients without clinical signs of heart
failure versus 7.7% in 443 patients with NYHA class I to IV heart
failure (P=0.018). By multiple logistic regression
analysis, mortality was significantly higher in patients with
preoperative symptomatic (NYHA class I to IV) heart failure
(odds ratio, 2.4; P=0.01) or reoperation (odds ratio,
3.8; P<0.0001). Mortality was not significantly
influenced by age, sex, the presence or severity of angina,
hypertension, left main coronary artery disease,
pulmonary disease, or severity of CHF (although LOS was
increased 0.7 days per NYHA class). Patients with a history of stroke
had a higher rate of perioperative stroke (16.4%
versus 3.6%, P=0.001) and an increased LOS (by 3.5
days).
ConclusionsSymptomatic heart failure and reoperation are predictors of increased operative mortality in patients with ventricular dysfunction and a positive signal-averaged ECG. Conversely, patients without heart failure symptoms may undergo CABG with relatively low mortality despite low ejection fraction. LOS is prolonged significantly by advanced age, history of stroke, and the presence and severity of heart failure.
Key Words: heart failure angina mortality coronary artery bypass surgery
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