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Prognostic Impact of Prolonged Cross-Clamp Time in Coronary Artery Bypass Grafting

Authors :
Riccardo Gherli
Giuseppe Santarpino
Francesco Onorati
Jean Philippe Verhoye
Matteo Saccocci
Karl Bounader
Fausto Biancari
Giuseppe Gatti
Daniel Reichart
Marisa De Feo
Sidney Chocron
Giuseppe Faggian
Antonio Salsano
Vito G. Ruggieri
Peter Svenarud
Tuomas Tauriainen
Magnus Dalén
Antonino S. Rubino
Tiziano Gherli
Andrea Perrotti
Giovanni Mariscalco
Francesco Nicolini
Daniele Maselli
Juhani Airaksinen
Ruggieri, Vito G.
Bounader, Karl
Verhoye, Jean Philippe
Onorati, Francesco
Rubino, Antonino S.
Gatti, Giuseppe
Tauriainen, Tuoma
De Feo, Marisa
Reichart, Daniel
Dalã©n, Magnu
Svenarud, Peter
Faggian, Giuseppe
Santarpino, Giuseppe
Maselli, Daniele
Gherli, Riccardo
Mariscalco, Giovanni
Salsano, Antonio
Nicolini, Francesco
Gherli, Tiziano
Saccocci, Matteo
Airaksinen, Juhani K. E.
Chocron, Sidney
Perrotti, Andrea
Biancari, Fausto
Publication Year :
2018

Abstract

Background: The prognostic impact of cross-clamp time (XCT) in patients undergoing isolated coronary artery bypass grafting (CABG) has not been thoroughly investigated. Material and Methods: 2957 patients who underwent on-pump isolated CABG from the prospective multicentre E-CABG study were the subjects of this analysis. Results: The mean XCT in this series was 58 ± 25 minutes Cross-clamp time was >60 minutes in 1134 patients (38.3%), >75 minutes in 619 patients (20.9%) and >90 minutes in 296 patients (10.0%). Multivariate analysis showed that XCT was an independent predictor of 30-day mortality (p < 0.0001, OR 1.027, 95%CI 1.015–1.039) along with age (p < 0.0001), female gender (p = 0.001), pulmonary disease (p = 0.001), poor mobility (p = 0.002), urgency status (p = 0.007), critical preoperative status (p = 0.002) and participating centres (p = 0.015). Adjusted risk of 30-day mortality was highest for XCT >75 minutes (2.9% vs. 1.7%, p = 0.002, OR 3.479, 95%CI 1.609–7.520). Analysis of 428 propensity score matched pairs showed that XCT >75 minutes was associated with significantly increased risk of early mortality, prolonged use of inotropes, postoperative use of intra-aortic balloon pump, use of extracorporeal membrane oxygenation, atrial fibrillation, prolonged stay in the intensive care unit and of composite major adverse events. Conclusions: Isolated CABG is currently performed with prolonged XCT in a significant number of patients and this seems to be a determinant of poor early outcome.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....3ad4f0fb92827f3c76d09e9158e92383