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Ann Thorac Surg 2010;90:199-203. doi:10.1016/j.athoracsur.2010.03.042
© 2010 The Society of Thoracic Surgeons

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Alessandro Brunelli
Gonzalo Varela
Michele Salati
Marcelo F. Jimenez
Cecilia Pompili
Nuria Novoa
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Right arrow Lung - cancer


Original Articles: General Thoracic

Recalibration of the Revised Cardiac Risk Index in Lung Resection Candidates

Alessandro Brunelli, MDa,*, Gonzalo Varela, MD, PhDb, Michele Salati, MDa, Marcelo F. Jimenez, MDb, Cecilia Pompili, MDa, Nuria Novoa, MDb, Armando Sabbatini, MDa

a Ospedali Riuniti, Ancona, Italy
b University Hospital Salamanca, Spain

Accepted for publication March 4, 2010.

* Address correspondence to Dr Brunelli, Division of Thoracic Surgery, Ospedali Riuniti Ancona, Via Conca 1, Ancona 60020, Italy (Email: brunellialex{at}gmail.com).

Presented at the Forty-sixth Annual Meeting of The Society of Thoracic Surgeons, Fort Lauderdale, FL, Jan 25–27, 2010.

Background: The revised cardiac risk index (RCRI) has been proposed as a tool for cardiac risk stratification before lung resection. However, the RCRI was originally developed from a generic surgical population including a small group of thoracic patients. The objective of this study was to recalibrate the RCRI in candidates for major lung resections to provide a more specific instrument for cardiac risk stratification.

Methods: One thousand six hundred ninety-six patients who underwent lobectomy (1,426) or pneumonectomy (270) in two centers between the years of 2000 and 2008 were analyzed. Stepwise logistic regression and bootstrap analyses were used to recalibrate the six variables comprising the RCRI. The outcome variable was occurrence of major cardiac complications (cardiac arrest, complete heart block, acute myocardial infarction, pulmonary edema, or cardiac death during admission). Only those variables with a probability of less than 0.1 in more than 50% of bootstrap samples were retained in the final model and proportionally weighted according to their regression estimates.

Results: The incidence of major cardiac morbidity was 3.3% (57 patients). Four of the six variables present in the RCRI were reliably associated with major cardiac complications: cerebrovascular disease (1.5 points), cardiac ischemia (1.5 points), renal disease (1 point), and pneumonectomy (1.5 points). Patients were grouped into four classes according to their recalibrated RCRI, predicting an incremental risk of cardiac morbidity (p < 0.0001). Compared with the traditional RCRI, the recalibrated score had a higher discrimination (c indexes, 0.72 versus 0.62; p = 0.004).

Conclusions: The recalibrated RCRI can be reliably used as a first-line screening instrument during cardiologic risk stratification for selecting those patients needing further cardiologic testing from those who can proceed with pulmonary evaluation without any further cardiac tests.




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