| Literature DB >> 35028755 |
Zbigniew Putowski1, Marcelina Czok2, Łukasz J Krzych3.
Abstract
Hemodynamic stability during surgery seems to account for positive postoperative outcomes in patients. However, little is known about the impact of intraoperative blood pressure variability (IBPV) on the postoperative complications. The aim was to investigate whether IBPV is associated with the development of postoperative complications and what is the nature of this association. We conducted a systematic search in PubMed, Medical Subject Headings, Embase, Web of Science, SCOPUS, clinicaltrials.gov, and Cochrane Library on the 8th of April, 2021. We included studies that only focused on adults who underwent primarily elective, non-cardiac surgery in which intraoperative blood pressure variation was measured and analyzed in regard to postoperative, non-surgical complications. We identified 11 papers. The studies varied in terms of applied definitions of blood pressure variation, of which standard deviation and average real variability were the most commonly applied definitions. Among the studies, the most consistent analyzed outcome was a 30-day mortality. The studies presented highly heterogeneous results, even after taking into account only the studies of best quality. Both higher and lower IBPV were reported to be associated for postoperative complications. Based on a limited number of studies, IBPV does not seem to be a reliable indicator in predicting postoperative complications. Existing premises suggest that either higher or lower IBPV could contribute to postoperative complications. Taking into account the heterogeneity and quality of the studies, the conclusions may not be definitive.Entities:
Keywords: Blood pressure; Intraoperative period; Postoperative complications; Variability
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35028755 PMCID: PMC8967760 DOI: 10.1007/s00540-022-03035-w
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Anesth ISSN: 0913-8668 Impact factor: 2.931
Fig. 1Flowchart of the progress of retrieved reports through the review
Summary of studies included for the analysis
| Authors | Study type | Number of study participants | Intraoperative blood pressure variability | Outcomes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Neuner et al. [ | Retrospective cohort | 917 | Blood pressure fluctuations were defined as the sum of the absolute differences between two consecutive measurements of systolic blood pressure during anesthesia | Higher intraoperative blood pressure variability was associated with POD |
| James et al. [ | Retrospective cohort | 1223 | Number of episodes in which MAP changed ≥ 15% from the previous measurement | Higher intraoperative blood pressure variability was protective in regard to 30-day mortality |
| Zevallos et al. [ | Case–control | 33 | Blood pressure variability defined as standard deviation and range | No statistically significant differences observed between CIN patients and controls |
| Li et al. [ | Case–control | 312 | Blood pressure variability defined as average real variability (ARV) | Higher intraoperative blood pressure variability was associated with the early cerebral infarction |
| Radinovic et al. [ | Prospective cohort | 277 | Blood pressure variability defined as a difference between the highest and the lowest mean arterial pressure that was measured intraoperatively (ΔMAP) | ΔMAP failed to be included in the multivariate model |
| Park et al. [ | Retrospective cohort | Discovery cohort: 45,520 Validation cohort: 29,704 | Blood pressure variability defined as Standard deviation (SD), Coefficient of variation (CV), Average real variability (ARV), Variation independent of the mean | Higher intraoperative blood pressure variability associated with postoperative AKI |
| Wiórek et al. [ | Prospective cohort | 835 | Blood pressure variability defined as coefficient of variation (CV) of SBP, DBP, and MAP | Higher intraoperative blood pressure variability was associated with 30-day postoperative mortality |
| Prasad et al. [ | Retrospective cohort | 55 | Blood pressure variability defined as median absolute deviation (MAD) of arterial blood pressure (ABP) | Higher blood pressure variability was protective against 180-day mortality |
| Mascha et al. [ | Retrospective cohort | 104,401 | Blood pressure variability defined as MAP average real variability (ARV) or standard deviation | MAP-ARV presented a U-shaped relationship to the postoperative 30-day mortality. Lower intraoperative blood pressure variability was mildly associated with postoperative 30-day mortality |
| MAP-SD presented a U-shaped relationship to the postoperative 30-day mortality. Lower and higher intraoperative blood pressure variability was mildly associated with postoperative 30-day mortality | ||||
| Cai et al. [ | Prospective cohort | 2118 | Maximum changes in BP were defined as the difference between highest and lowest mean arterial pressure (MAP) during surgery | Maximum change in blood pressure was independently associated with failed extubation |
| Levin et al. [ | Retrospective cohort | Derivation cohort: 35,314 Validation cohort:17,605 | Blood pressure variability defined as a number of percentage change between two consecutive MAP recordings | Higher blood pressure variability was independently associated with improved survival (in patients with no prior antihypertensive medications) |