Circulation, Vol 86, 1485-1494, Copyright © 1992 by American Heart Association
DB Mark, LC Lam, KL Lee, NE Clapp-Channing, RB Williams, DB Pryor, RM Califf and MA Hlatky
BACKGROUND. Work disability is common in patients with coronary artery
disease and adversely affects both economic well-being and quality of life.
The purpose of this study was to construct a model to predict premature
departure from the work force of patients with coronary disease and to
validate this model prospectively in an independent cohort of patients.
METHODS AND RESULTS. We enrolled 1,252 coronary disease patients referred
for diagnostic cardiac catheterization who were less than age 65, employed,
and without prior coronary angioplasty or coronary bypass surgery. Medical,
functional, psychological, economic, and job-related variables were
measured at the time of baseline diagnostic cardiac catheterization, and
all patients were followed for 1 year. Three hundred twelve patients
underwent percutaneous transluminal coronary angioplasty (PTCA) within 60
days of catheterization, and 449 had coronary artery bypass graft surgery
(CABG) within 60 days of catheterization. The remaining 491 patients were
treated with initial medical therapy. Logistic regression was used to
develop a multivariable model for predicting 1-year work status in the
training sample patients (872 patients enrolled between March 1986 and
February 1989). This model was then validated in the independent
prospective test sample (380 patients enrolled between March 1989 and June
1990). Eight factors were independent predictors of departure from the work
force: lower initial functional status (as assessed by the Duke Activity
Status Index), followed by older age, black race, presence of congestive
heart failure, lower education level, presence of extracardiac vascular
disease, poorer psychological status, and lower job classification.
Standard clinical variables provided only 20% of the total predictive
information available from the model about follow-up work outcomes, whereas
functional measures provided 27%, and demographic and socioeconomic
measures provided 45%. In the test sample, the area under the receiver
operating characteristic curve for the model predictions was 0.74, compared
with 0.80 in the training sample, and model predictions agreed well with
observed prevalences of return to work. After adjustment for baseline
imbalances, there was no significant difference in 1-year return-to-work
rates among the patients receiving initial PTCA or CABG therapy versus
initial medical therapy. CONCLUSIONS. Patients with coronary disease who
are at high risk for premature departure from the work force can be
accurately identified from a combination of medical and nonmedical risk
factors. The model developed in this study provides a tool to identify
patients at high risk for premature loss from the work force. Such patients
may benefit from special multidimensional intervention programs designed to
preserve work status. Our data show that revascularization with either PTCA
or CABG is not, by itself, sufficient to accomplish this goal.
ARTICLES
Identification of patients with coronary disease at high risk for loss of employment. A prospective validation study
Division of Cardiology, Duke University Medical Center, Durham, N.C. 27710.
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