1. Quantification of metabolic equivalents (METs) by the MET-REPAIR questionnaire: A validation study in patients with a high cardiovascular burden.
- Author
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Jaeger C, Burkard T, Kamber F, Seeberger E, Bolliger D, Pfister O, Buse GL, and Mauermann E
- Subjects
- Adult, Aged, Biomarkers, Humans, Metabolic Equivalent, Natriuretic Peptide, Brain, Peptide Fragments, Risk Assessment, Surveys and Questionnaires, Exercise Test, Exercise Tolerance
- Abstract
Study Objective: Quantifying functional capacity is a core component of preoperative cardiovascular risk assessment. Lower metabolic equivalents (METs) are associated with higher morbidity/mortality in non-surgical and surgical populations. However, actually measuring METs preoperatively is rare. We sought to determine the correlation of self-reported METs using the questionnaire of the MET: REevaluation for Perioperative cArdIac Risk (MET-REPAIR) study and objectively measured METs by gold-standard cardiopulmonary exercise testing (CPET)., Design: Single-center prospective validation study., Setting: University hospital., Patients: We enrolled adult patients aged ≥45 undergoing out-patient cardiac rehabilitation., Intervention: Patients completed the MET-REPAIR Questionnaire and the Duke Activity Status Index (DASI), had blood samples drawn, and underwent undergoing routine CPET., Measurements: We compared measured METs by CPET to 1) self-reported METs (the MET-REPAIR Questionnaire), 2) the DASI score, 3) stand-alone questions, and 4) N-terminal pro-brain natriuretic peptide (NT-proBNP) concentrations., Main Results: 140 patients were recruited. Measured METs by CPET correlated with 1) self-reported METs by the MET-REPAIR Questionnaire (ρ = 0.489, "fair"), 2) self-reported physical activity by the DASI (ρ = 0.487, "fair"), 3) the self-reported continual stair climbing ability (one of the stand-alone questions; ρ = 0.587, "fair") and 4) NT-proBNP concentrations (ρ = -0.353, "poor"). The area under the receiver operating characteristic curve (AUROC) for the ability to perform more than 4 METs were: highest for flights of stairs (0.841 [95%CI 0.735-0.948], p < 0.05 to rest, optimum: 3 flights), not significantly different between MET-REPAIR Questionnaire and DASI (0.666 [95%CI 0.551-0.781], optimum: 6 METs vs. 0.704 [95%CI 0.578-0.829], optimum: 32.2 points or 6.7 METs, p = 0.405), and not significant for NT-proBNP: (0.623 [95%CI 0.483-0.763])., Conclusions: The MET-REPAIR Questionnaire correlates with measured METs; all utilized forms of self-reported physical activity overestimate measured METs. NT-proBNP correlates poorly with measured METs., (Copyright © 2021 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2022
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