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Chronotropic incompetence and myocardial injury after noncardiac surgery: planned secondary analysis of a prospective observational international cohort study

Chronotropic incompetence and myocardial injury after noncardiac surgery: planned secondary analysis of a prospective observational international cohort study
Chronotropic incompetence and myocardial injury after noncardiac surgery: planned secondary analysis of a prospective observational international cohort study

Background: Physiological measures of heart failure are common in surgical patients, despite the absence of a diagnosis. Heart rate (HR) increases during exercise are frequently blunted in heart failure (termed chronotropic incompetence), which primarily reflects beta-adrenoreceptor dysfunction. We examined whether chronotropic incompetence was associated with myocardial injury after noncardiac surgery. Methods: This was a predefined analysis of an international cohort study where participants aged ≥40 yr underwent symptom-limited cardiopulmonary exercise testing before noncardiac surgery. Chronotropic incompetence was defined as the ratio of increase in HR during exercise to age-predicted maximal increase in HR <0.6. The primary outcome was myocardial injury within 3 days after surgery, defined by high-sensitivity troponin assays >99th centile. Explanatory variables were biomarkers for heart failure (ventilatory efficiency slope [minute ventilation/carbon dioxide production] ≥34; peak oxygen consumption ≤14 ml kg −1 min −1 ; HR recovery ≤6 beats min −1 decrease 1 min post-exercise; preoperative N-terminal pro-B-type natriuretic peptide [NT pro-BNP] >300 pg ml −1 ). Myocardial injury was compared in the presence or absence of sympathetic (i.e. chronotropic incompetence) or parasympathetic (i.e. impaired HR recovery after exercise) thresholds indicative of dysfunction. Data are presented as odds ratios (ORs) (95% confidence intervals). Results: Chronotropic incompetence occurred in 396/1325 (29.9%) participants; only 16/1325 (1.2%) had a heart failure diagnosis. Myocardial injury was sustained by 162/1325 (12.2%) patients. Raised preoperative NT pro-BNP was more common when chronotropic incompetence was <0.6 (OR: 1.57 [1.11–2.23]; P=0.011). Chronotropic incompetence was not significantly associated with myocardial injury (OR: 1.05 [0.74–1.50]; P=0.78), independent of rate-limiting therapy. HR recovery <12 beats min −1 decrease after exercise was associated with myocardial injury in the presence (OR: 1.62 [1.05–2.51]; P=0.03) or absence (OR: 1.60 [1.06–2.39]; P=0.02) of chronotropic incompetence. Conclusions: Chronotropic incompetence is common in surgical patients. In contrast to parasympathetic dysfunction which was associated with myocardial injury, preoperative chronotropic incompetence (suggestive of sympathetic dysfunction) was not associated with postoperative myocardial injury.

autonomic dysfunction, general surgery, myocardium, sympathetic, vagus
0007-0912
Abbott, Tom E.F.
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Pearse, Rupert M.
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Beattie, W. Scott
c79d8200-7231-4645-af91-f430d815ff08
Phull, Mandeep
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Beilstein, Christian
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Raj, Ashok
2aa809a2-1394-4587-9ef1-5ad2b89476f0
Grocott, Michael P.W.
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Cuthbertson, Brian H.
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Wijesundera, Duminda
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Ackland, Gareth L.
a39cc4b9-a733-405f-bd1a-a86ab57292a0
Abbott, Tom E.F.
3602247a-7748-4d92-b28c-b346a759ecc6
Pearse, Rupert M.
50f634bc-77c8-4f69-8650-e2b0a29ceaed
Beattie, W. Scott
c79d8200-7231-4645-af91-f430d815ff08
Phull, Mandeep
d58823d4-68b4-4103-9d01-bf65729d823c
Beilstein, Christian
174b62eb-1419-4c62-a4de-182c2b92fcbd
Raj, Ashok
2aa809a2-1394-4587-9ef1-5ad2b89476f0
Grocott, Michael P.W.
1e87b741-513e-4a22-be13-0f7bb344e8c2
Cuthbertson, Brian H.
6847b8f3-93c3-49d2-8bd9-a0bb5393541c
Wijesundera, Duminda
01491b7e-4507-4d74-9597-ff19647c9449
Ackland, Gareth L.
a39cc4b9-a733-405f-bd1a-a86ab57292a0

Abbott, Tom E.F., Pearse, Rupert M., Beattie, W. Scott, Phull, Mandeep, Beilstein, Christian, Raj, Ashok, Grocott, Michael P.W., Cuthbertson, Brian H., Wijesundera, Duminda and Ackland, Gareth L. (2019) Chronotropic incompetence and myocardial injury after noncardiac surgery: planned secondary analysis of a prospective observational international cohort study. British Journal of Anaesthesia. (doi:10.1016/j.bja.2019.03.022).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Background: Physiological measures of heart failure are common in surgical patients, despite the absence of a diagnosis. Heart rate (HR) increases during exercise are frequently blunted in heart failure (termed chronotropic incompetence), which primarily reflects beta-adrenoreceptor dysfunction. We examined whether chronotropic incompetence was associated with myocardial injury after noncardiac surgery. Methods: This was a predefined analysis of an international cohort study where participants aged ≥40 yr underwent symptom-limited cardiopulmonary exercise testing before noncardiac surgery. Chronotropic incompetence was defined as the ratio of increase in HR during exercise to age-predicted maximal increase in HR <0.6. The primary outcome was myocardial injury within 3 days after surgery, defined by high-sensitivity troponin assays >99th centile. Explanatory variables were biomarkers for heart failure (ventilatory efficiency slope [minute ventilation/carbon dioxide production] ≥34; peak oxygen consumption ≤14 ml kg −1 min −1 ; HR recovery ≤6 beats min −1 decrease 1 min post-exercise; preoperative N-terminal pro-B-type natriuretic peptide [NT pro-BNP] >300 pg ml −1 ). Myocardial injury was compared in the presence or absence of sympathetic (i.e. chronotropic incompetence) or parasympathetic (i.e. impaired HR recovery after exercise) thresholds indicative of dysfunction. Data are presented as odds ratios (ORs) (95% confidence intervals). Results: Chronotropic incompetence occurred in 396/1325 (29.9%) participants; only 16/1325 (1.2%) had a heart failure diagnosis. Myocardial injury was sustained by 162/1325 (12.2%) patients. Raised preoperative NT pro-BNP was more common when chronotropic incompetence was <0.6 (OR: 1.57 [1.11–2.23]; P=0.011). Chronotropic incompetence was not significantly associated with myocardial injury (OR: 1.05 [0.74–1.50]; P=0.78), independent of rate-limiting therapy. HR recovery <12 beats min −1 decrease after exercise was associated with myocardial injury in the presence (OR: 1.62 [1.05–2.51]; P=0.03) or absence (OR: 1.60 [1.06–2.39]; P=0.02) of chronotropic incompetence. Conclusions: Chronotropic incompetence is common in surgical patients. In contrast to parasympathetic dysfunction which was associated with myocardial injury, preoperative chronotropic incompetence (suggestive of sympathetic dysfunction) was not associated with postoperative myocardial injury.

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Accepted/In Press date: 3 March 2019
e-pub ahead of print date: 24 April 2019
Keywords: autonomic dysfunction, general surgery, myocardium, sympathetic, vagus

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Local EPrints ID: 430791
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/430791
ISSN: 0007-0912
PURE UUID: 8fec59c1-4327-49b1-a54c-258b58be0fa5
ORCID for Michael P.W. Grocott: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-9484-7581

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Date deposited: 13 May 2019 16:30
Last modified: 18 Mar 2024 03:12

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Author: Tom E.F. Abbott
Author: Rupert M. Pearse
Author: W. Scott Beattie
Author: Mandeep Phull
Author: Christian Beilstein
Author: Ashok Raj
Author: Brian H. Cuthbertson
Author: Duminda Wijesundera
Author: Gareth L. Ackland

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