Literature DB >> 19017329

Prognostic value of exercise stress test and dobutamine stress echo in patients with known coronary artery disease.

Francesca Innocenti1, Francesca Caldi, Irene Tassinari, Chiara Agresti, Costanza Burgisser, Francesco Fattirolli, Giorgio Jacopo Baldereschi, Niccolò Marchionni, Giulio Masotti, Riccardo Pini.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: The aim of this study was to compare the feasibility of dobutamine stress echocardiography (DSE) and exercise stress test (EST) between patients in different age groups and to evaluate their proportional prognostic value in a population with established coronary artery disease (CAD).
METHODS: The study sample included 323 subjects, subdivided in group 1 (G1), comprising 246 patients aged <75 years, and group 2 (G2), with 77 subjects aged >or=75 years. DSE and EST were performed before enrollment in a cardiac rehabilitation program; for prognostic assessment, end points were all-cause mortality and hard cardiac events (cardiac death or nonfatal myocardial infarction).
RESULTS: During DSE, G2 patients showed worse wall motion score index (WMSI), but the test was stopped for complications in a comparable proportion of cases (54 G1 and 19 G2 patients, P = NS). EST was inconclusive in similarly high proportion of patients in both groups (76% in G1 vs. 84% in G2, P = NS); G2 patients reached a significantly lower total workload (6 +/- 1.6 METs in G1 vs. 5 +/- 1.2 METs in G2, P < 0.001). At multivariate analysis, a lower peak exercise capacity (HR 0.566, CI 0.351-0.914, P = 0.020) was associated with higher mortality, while a high-dose WMSI >2 (HR 5.123, CI 1.559-16.833, P = 0.007), viability (HR 3.354, CI 1.162-9.678, P = 0.025), and nonprescription of beta-blockers (HR 0.328, CI 0.114-0.945, P = 0.039) predicted hard cardiac events.
CONCLUSION: In patients with known CAD, EST and DSE maintain a significant prognostic role in terms of peak exercise capacity for EST and of presence of viability and an extensive wall motion abnormalities at peak DSE.

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Year:  2008        PMID: 19017329     DOI: 10.1111/j.1540-8175.2008.00752.x

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Echocardiography        ISSN: 0742-2822            Impact factor:   1.724


  1 in total

Review 1.  Comparative definitions for moderate-severe ischemia in stress nuclear, echocardiography, and magnetic resonance imaging.

Authors:  Leslee J Shaw; Daniel S Berman; Michael H Picard; Matthias G Friedrich; Raymond Y Kwong; Gregg W Stone; Roxy Senior; James K Min; Rory Hachamovitch; Marielle Scherrer-Crosbie; Jennifer H Mieres; Thomas H Marwick; Lawrence M Phillips; Farooq A Chaudhry; Patricia A Pellikka; Piotr Slomka; Andrew E Arai; Ami E Iskandrian; Timothy M Bateman; Gary V Heller; Todd D Miller; Eike Nagel; Abhinav Goyal; Salvador Borges-Neto; William E Boden; Harmony R Reynolds; Judith S Hochman; David J Maron; Pamela S Douglas
Journal:  JACC Cardiovasc Imaging       Date:  2014-06
  1 in total

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