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Predicting premature termination of exercise during Bruce protocol stress echocardiography.

Authors :
Loh J
Amanullah MR
See CK
Tang HC
Gunasegaran K
Hamid N
Lau J
Lee CY
Ewe SH
Ding ZP
Sahlén A
Source :
Echocardiography (Mount Kisco, N.Y.) [Echocardiography] 2021 Sep; Vol. 38 (9), pp. 1612-1617. Date of Electronic Publication: 2021 Sep 09.
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

Aims: Clinical guidelines recommend that the exercise protocol of a stress echocardiogram is selected to induce volitional exhaustion after a target duration of at least 8 minutes. While the Bruce protocol is very commonly used for clinical stress tests, it is known to be "steep", and many patients therefore fail to reach 8 minutes. We studied predictors of failure and developed a method for identifying patients not suitable for Bruce protocol which was accurate and yet simple enough to be used as a point-of-care decision support tool.<br />Methods and Results: We studied data out-patients undergoing Bruce protocol stress echocardiograms (n = 11 086) and analyzed predictors of inappropriate early termination (defined as test duration < 8 min as per current practice guidelines) using logistic regression. A prediction model was constructed as follows: .5 points were given for each of hypertension, diabetes, smoking, and E/e' > 7.9 in the resting echocardiogram; .1 point was added for each 1-unit increment in body mass index; 1 point was added for patient age by decade; 2.0 points were subtracted for male sex (p for all < 0.001). In tests on held-out validation data, the model was well calibrated (in plots of predicted vs actual risk) and discriminated failure versus non-failure well (C-statistic .86 for a score of 6.0 points; p < 0.001).<br />Conclusion: These data may help to standardize protocol selection in stress echocardiography, by identifying patients pre-hoc where Bruce protocol will be inappropriately steep.<br /> (© 2021 Wiley Periodicals LLC.)

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1540-8175
Volume :
38
Issue :
9
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Echocardiography (Mount Kisco, N.Y.)
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
34505312
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1111/echo.15186