Title: Pre Operative Assessment Of The High Risk Surgical Patient
1Pre Operative Assessment Of The High Risk
Surgical Patient
- Lui G Forni NG Lavies
- Department of Critical Care
- Worthing Southlands Hospitals
2Introduction
- Identifying the High Risk Patient
- Risk Scoring
- CVS Risk Assessment
- How we have addressed the problem
- Future Developments
3Introduction
- Over 20,000 patients a year die following surgery
- Most die within 30 days of surgery on general
wards
4Introduction
- Improved Surgical Outcomes Group recommended
(2005) - improved pre-op assessment
- improved intra-operative care
- improved use of post operative resources
- This followed Association of Anaesthetists
guidelines - Hopefully should lead to improved outcomes
5How Do We Identify The High Risk Surgical Patient?
- Surgical Factors
- Patient Factors
6Surgical Factors
- Different operations have different mortality
rates - 0.5 for elective THR
- 13 for elective oesophagogastrectomy
- Emergency operations have higher mortality
- 10.7 for elective surgery patients
- 36.8 for emergency surgery patients
7Urgency and Operative Mortality
- Mella BJS 98
- Colorectal surgery audit
- Operations carried out urgently have a higher
mortality rate for same ASA
8Surgical Factors
- Intermediate Risk (lt5)
- Intraperitoneal surgery
- Intrathoracic surgery
- Head and neck surgery
- Major Orthopedic surgery
- Prostate surgery
- High Risk (gt5)
- Major emergency procedures eg acute abdomen,
major trauma - Aortic/major vascular surgery
- Prolonged surgery with large fluid shifts/blood
loss - Peripheral vascular surgery
- Low Risk (lt1)
- Endoscopic procedures
- Superficial procedures
- Cataract surgery
- Breast surgery
9Patient Factors
- Age
- Existing Co-morbidity
- Exercise Tolerance
- Medication
10Patient Factors Age
- Higher number of concurrent disease processes
- Decline of physiological reserve with ageing
(cardiovascular/pulmonary/renal/musculoskeletal) - ? Increased morbidity mortality with age
11CEPOD Deaths by Age 1998/9
12Effect of Age on Mortality Post Op (NCEPOD 2001)
of Total Deaths/Operations
Age in Years
13Patient Factors
- Age
- Existing Co-morbidity
14Co-existing Medical Problems and Perioperative
Death (NCEPOD 2002)
age of patients
15Patient Factors Cardiovascular Disease
- Approximately 75 of patients who suffer
perioperative death have cardiovascular disease
16Patient Factors Cardiovascular Disease
- Risk factors for cardiovascular death within 30
days of operationHowell SJ et al BJA 19988014 - Previous MI (odds ratio 4.04)
- Angina (odds ratio 3.55)
- Hypertension (odds ratio 2.53)
- Renal Failure (odds ratio 4.23)
- Cardiac Failure (odds ratio 2.8)
17Pre-operative Risk Scoring
- Various Scoring Systems Published
- ASA (1963)
- Goldman Cardiac Index (1977)
- Detsky Cardiac Index (1986)
- Possum (Copeland 1991)
- Lee Revised Cardiac Index (1999)
18Pre-operative Risk Scoring
- ASA
- Fit, healthy patient
- Mild systemic disease
- Severe systemic disease-limiting activity but not
incapacitating - Incapacitating systemic disease-a constant threat
to life - Moribund-not expected to survive
19ASA and Perioperative Mortality (NCEPOD 2002)
age of deaths
ASA
20Lee Cardiac Risk Index(Lee et al Circulation
1999 1001043)
- 6 Point Score one for each of the following
- High risk surgical procedure
- History of IHD
- History of CCF
- History of Cerebrovasular disease
- Insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus
- Chronic renal failure (creatinine gt177)
21Lee Cardiac Risk IndexValidated in 1422
non-cardiac surgical patients
- Risk of major cardiac complications
- (MI, pulmonary oedema, VF or primary cardiac
arrest, complete heart block) - 0 point 0.4
- 1 point 0.9
- 2 points 7
- 3 or more points 11
22Lee Cardiac Risk Index
- Applied to 1351 major vascular surgical patients
(Boersma et al 2001) - 1 point 1.3 risk (of MI or death)
- 2 points 3.1 risk
- 3 or more points 9.1 risk
23Cardiovascular Risk Assessment
- How can we assess cardiac risk?
- Static Testing
- Electrocardiography
- Transthoracic Echocardiography
- Transoesophageal Echocardiography
- Cardiac catheterisation
- Dynamic Testing
24Improving Risk stratification
- Dynamic Testing
- Exercise Tolerance
- Exercise ECG testing
- Dobutamine stress echo
- Dipyridimole stress echo
- Dipyridimole thallium scintigraphy
- Cardiopulmonary exercise testing
25Pre-operative Functional Assessment
- 1 MET 3.5 ml O2 / kg / min (Oxygen consumption
by 40 yo 70 kg man at rest) - 1 MET eating and dressing
- 3 MET light housework, walking 100m, golfing
with a cart, slow ball-room dancing - 4 MET climbing 2 flights of stairs
- 6 MET short run
- gt10 MET able to participate in strenuous sport
26Exercise Tolerance and RiskReilly DF et al Arch
Intern Med 19991592185
- 600 patients undergoing major non-cardiac surgery
- If unable to walk 4 blocks and climb 2 flights of
stairs poor exercise tolerance ie lt 4 METs - Patients with poor exercise tolerance had twice
the incidence of perioperative complications
(cardiovascular and neurological) 20 vs 10
plt0.001
27Cardiopulmonary Exercise Testing
- Myocardial ischaemia in absence of heart failure
has little effect on outcome (Older et al 1993) - CPET is an objective test to determine
pre-operative fitness - Correlates well with post operative survival
- Can identify patients with an increased risk
profile where surgery may be inappropriate
28Cardiopulmonary Exercise Testing
- Examines the ability of the CVS to deliver oxygen
to tissues under stress - If a patient is unable to elevate oxygen delivery
to the required levels they are more likely to
have a poor outcome
29Cardiopulmonary Exercise Testing
- The patient is asked to exercise at a known work
rate on some form of ergometer while a number of
variables are measured - (1) ECG
- (2) Blood pressure
- (3) Expired air flow
- (4) O2 uptake from the air
- (5) CO2 output from the body
- (6) Arterial blood gases.
30Parameters Measured
- VO2 - volume of oxygen consumed
- ml/min (absolute)
- ml/kg/min (relative)
- METS - metabolic equivalents
- 1 MET 3.5 ml/kg/min
- VCO2 - volume of carbon dioxide produced
- ml/min
31Parameters Measured
- During exercise, when rise in VCO2 becomes
disproportionate to rise in VO2 - Indicates the level of exercise where body has
reached maximal aerobic capacity - Termed the Anaerobic Threshold
32Anaerobic Threshold by Age
33Parameters Measured
34Cardiopulmonary Exercise Testing
35Cardiopulmonary Exercise Testing
- Cardiopulmonary Exercise Testing
- Older P. et al Chest 1993 104 701
- 187 major abdominal surgical patients over 60
- Defined the Anaerobic threshold by exercise
testing
Anaerobic threshold lt11 ml/min/kg
Anaerobic threshold gt11 ml/min/kg
N132
N55
Mortality rate 0.8
Mortality rate 18
36Cardiopulmonary Exercise Testing
- 4 METS 14 ml/kg/min O2 consumption BUT
- 80 of elective major abdominal cases have an AT
of lt 14 ml/kg/min - Only those with AT lt 11 ml/kg/min (32) are high
risk - Clinical differentiation between these groups not
possible - CPX testing required to identify the high risk
group
37Does It Work?
548 Patients having major abdominal surgery
AT gt 11 ml/min/kg Myocardial Ischaemia
AT gt 11 ml/min/kg No Myocardial ischaemia
AT lt 11 ml/min/kg aortic / oesophageal surgery
ICU (28)
HDU (21)
Ward (51)
7 died (4.6)
2 died (1.7)
0 died (0)
38Now we have identified the high-risk patient
What do we do next?
39How We Addressed The Problem
- Both clinicians were aware of the need to offer
selected pre-operative assessment - Joint anaesthetic and medical clinic to assess
high risk patients started in 2003 - The Surgical Pre-assessment Anaesthetic and
Medical clinic - SPAM clinic
40The SPAM Clinic
- Consultant Lead
- Allows Medical Anaesthetic Review
- Assess patient
- Discuss pre/post operative care
- ?Assess risk
41The SPAM Clinic
- Had several perceived potential benefits
- Both clinicians actively involved in ITU and
manage the patients post operatively - Outpatient assessment enables relative ease in
ordering appropriate investigations and follow up - Allows objective assessment of the patient by 2
experienced clinicians and should prevent
cancellations
42The SPAM Clinic
- Routine pre-assessment is still performed in
our trust - Where problems arise the SPAM clinic allows a
point of easy referral - Referral occurs from
- surgical colleagues where they feel additional
assessment is required - anaesthetic colleagues
- All major surgery requiring ITU post operatively
is referred routinely
43The SPAM Clinic
- Does it work?
- The results shown are from the initial 125
patients seen in the SPAM clinic - Follow up data was collected from the patient
notes or GP after 6 months
44Referral Pattern
SD
Age
Male
Total
Speciality
8.9
77.6
93
23
Urology
8.1
80.0
52
15
Orthopaedics
2.1
29.5
0
3
OG
12.4
70.6
45
59
Surgery
13.0
69.0
72
18
Upper GI
45Results
- 90 deemed fit for surgery
- 33 deemed unfit
- 2 refused surgery (?SPAM Effect)
- No significant differences between the groups
other than age
46Results
lt.05
Age
NS
Lee Cardiac Index Score
NS
Number of Co-Morbidities
NS
Number of Medications
47Outcomes From Clinic/Surgery
Mortality ()
6 Month Mortality
Number
9.7
9
92
Fit Patients
36.4
12
33
Unfit Patients
48Causes of Death
Unfit
Fit
4
5
Disease Progression
4
0
Myocardial Infarct
2
2
CVA
1
0
GI Bleed
1
1
Other
0
1
Refused Surgery
49Results
- Significant reduction in mortality is observed in
the group deemed fit for surgery - ? may reflect the overall differences in case mix
- Is this the whole story?
50Results
- No! Not the whole story..
- 9 patients of the 92 deemed fit for surgery died
within 6 months of assessment - But 6 died before operation
- 1 refused surgery
- 2 died of CVAs
- 3 died of disease progression and deemed
inoperable - Only 3 died within 6 months of surgery who had
surgery
51Results
- Therefore of those deemed fit for surgery 3 died
postoperatively (3) - 2 of disease progression
- 1 following trauma 4 months post-op
- Thus the overall post operative mortality was 0
52Conclusions
- The introduction of the SPAM clinic has provided
a useful service to our trust - Has allowed those deemed inappropriate for
surgical intervention to be cancelled in good
time - Allows other treatment to be instigated where
appropriate.
53Conclusions
- Most encouragingly the overall operative risk in
those deemed high risk is very low - ? Our threshold is too high
- Hopefully preoperative risk stratification will
be improved further with the introduction of CPET
54Thank You For Listening