Literature DB >> 23435524

Off-pump surgery in preventing perioperative stroke after coronary artery bypass grafting: a retrospective multicentre study.

Fernando Hornero1, Elio Martín, Rafael Rodríguez, Manel Castellà, Carlos Porras, Bernat Romero, Luis Maroto, Enrique Pérez de la Sota.   

Abstract

OBJECTIVES: To determine the effect of the off-pump technique in preventing stroke development during the early perioperative period after coronary artery bypass graft surgery (CABG).
METHODS: Patients undergoing isolated CABG surgery were enrolled from 21 Spanish cardiac-surgery centres. Baseline variables related to perioperative stroke risk were recorded in the preoperative (age, gender, diabetes mellitus, arterial hypertension, prior stroke, cardiac failure: preoperative New York Heart Association class III-IV and/or left ventricular ejection fraction <40%, non-elective priority of surgery, peripheral arteriopathy, chronic renal failure) and intraoperative periods (on/off-pump performance). The Northern New England Cardiovascular Disease Study Group (NNECDSG) stroke risk schema was used to stratify stroke risk and compare observed neurological outcomes in this study.
RESULTS: A total of 26 347 patients were included in the study. Global perioperative stroke incidence was 1.38%. Non-elective priority of surgery (OR = 2.37), peripheral arteriopathy (OR = 1.62), cardiac failure (OR = 2.98), prior stroke (OR = 1.57) and chronic renal failure (OR = 6.16) were found to be independent risk factors for perioperative stroke in uni- and multivariate models; Hosmer-Lemeshow test: χ(2) = 4.62, P = 0.59. Perioperative stroke incidence increased whenever NNECDSG score or the number of preoperative risk factors increased. However, on- vs off-pump surgery did not show statistical differences in NNECDSG strata. For patients with two or more preoperative independent risk factors, off-pump surgery showed a significant reduction in perioperative stroke incidence (4.29 vs 6.76%, P < 0.05), particularly when one of these factors was chronic renal failure or preoperative cardiac failure. However, when both factors were present concomitantly there was no difference between on and off-pump techniques, P < 0.0001.
CONCLUSIONS: Off-pump surgery has a lower perioperative stroke incidence than on-pump only in cases associated with cardiovascular stroke-risk factors, in particular, with chronic renal failure and preoperative cardiac failure, but also with peripheral arteriopathy, prior stroke and non-elective surgery. The perioperative stroke rate remains high in cases with two or more preoperative stroke risk factors, even when using the off-pump technique, particularly when chronic renal failure is present.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Coronary; Off-pump; Stroke

Mesh:

Year:  2013        PMID: 23435524     DOI: 10.1093/ejcts/ezt067

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Eur J Cardiothorac Surg        ISSN: 1010-7940            Impact factor:   4.191


  2 in total

1.  Off-pump or on-pump coronary artery bypass at 30 days: A propensity matched analysis.

Authors:  Chen Wang; Yefan Jiang; Yu Song; Qingpeng Wang; Rui Tian; Dashuai Wang; Nianguo Dong; Xionggang Jiang; Si Chen; Xinzhong Chen
Journal:  Front Cardiovasc Med       Date:  2022-08-01

2.  On-pump versus off-pump coronary artery bypass surgery in patients older than 60 years: five-year follow-up of MASS III trial.

Authors:  Rodrigo Morel Vieira de Melo; Whady Hueb; Paulo Cury Rezende; Eduardo Gomes Lima; Alexandre Ciappina Hueb; José Antonio Franchini Ramires; Roberto Kalil Filho
Journal:  J Cardiothorac Surg       Date:  2014-08-05       Impact factor: 1.637

  2 in total

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