1. Presepsin for pre-operative prediction of major adverse cardiovascular events in coronary heart disease patients undergoing noncardiac surgery
- Author
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Jan Larmann, Henrike Janssen, S. Dehne, Jessica Handke, Johannes Krisam, Florian Espeter, Christoph Arens, Markus A. Weigand, Anna S. Scholz, Hans-Jörg Gillmann, Johann Motsch, and Florian Uhle
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,Revised Cardiac Risk Index ,Lipopolysaccharide Receptors ,Coronary Artery Disease ,Lower risk ,Risk Assessment ,Coronary artery disease ,03 medical and health sciences ,Postoperative Complications ,0302 clinical medicine ,Troponin T ,Predictive Value of Tests ,Risk Factors ,030202 anesthesiology ,Internal medicine ,Post-hoc analysis ,Leukocytes ,Humans ,Medicine ,Prospective Studies ,Myocardial infarction ,Stroke ,business.industry ,030208 emergency & critical care medicine ,Perioperative ,medicine.disease ,Peptide Fragments ,Anesthesiology and Pain Medicine ,Cardiology ,business ,Blood sampling - Abstract
Background Accurate pre-operative evaluation of cardiovascular risk is vital to identify patients at risk for major adverse cardiovascular and cerebrovascular events (MACCE) after noncardiac surgery. Elevated presepsin (sCD14-ST) is associated with peri-operative MACCE in coronary artery disease (CAD) patients after noncardiac surgery. Objectives Validating the prognostic utility of presepsin for MACCE after noncardiac surgery. Design Prospective patient enrolment and blood sampling, followed by post hoc evaluation of pre-operative presepsin for prediction of MACCE. Setting Single university centre. Patients A total of 222 CAD patients undergoing elective, inpatient noncardiac surgery. Intervention Pre-operative presepsin measurement. Main outcome measures MACCE (cardiovascular death, myocardial infarction, myocardial ischaemia and stroke) at 30 days postsurgery. Results MACCE was diagnosed in 23 (10%) patients. MACCE patients presented with increased pre-operative presepsin (median [IQR]; 212 [163 to 358] vs. 156 [102 to 273] pgml, P = 0.023). Presepsin exceeding the previously derived threshold of 184 pg ml was associated with increased 30-day MACCE rate. After adjustment for confounders, presepsin more than 184 pg ml [OR = 2.8 (95% confidence interval 1.1 to 7.3), P = 0.03] remained an independent predictor of peri-operative MACCE. Predictive accuracy of presepsin was moderate [area under the curve (AUC) = 0.65 (0.54 to 0.75), P = 0.023]. While the basic risk model of revised cardiac risk index, high-sensitive cardiac troponin T and N-terminal fragment of pro-brain natriuretic peptide resulted in an AUC = 0.62 (0.48 to 0.75), P = 0.072, addition of presepsin to the model led to an AUC = 0.67 (0.56 to 0.78), P = 0.009 and (ΔAUC = 0.05, P = 0.438). Additive risk predictive value of presepsin was demonstrated by integrated discrimination improvement analysis (integrated discrimination improvement = 0.023, P = 0.022). Net reclassification improvement revealed that the additional strength of presepsin was attributed to the reclassification of no-MACCE patients into a lower risk group. Conclusion Increased pre-operative presepsin independently predicted 30-day MACCE in CAD patients undergoing major noncardiac surgery. Complementing cardiovascular risk prediction by inflammatory biomarkers, such as presepsin, offers potential to improve peri-operative care. However, as prediction accuracy of presepsin was only moderate, further validation studies are needed. Trial registration Clinicaltrials.gov: NCT03105427.
- Published
- 2020
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