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Ann Thorac Surg 2002;74:394-399
© 2002 The Society of Thoracic Surgeons
a Section of Cardiac Surgery, Department of Surgery, Washington Hospital Center, Washington, DC, USA
b MedStar Research Institute, Washington, DC, USA
Accepted for publication March 18, 2002.
* Address reprint requests to Dr Corso, Chief Section of Cardiac Surgery, Washington Hospital Center, 106 Irving Street NW, Suite 316, South Tower, Washington, DC 20010, USA
e-mail: paul.j.corso{at}medstar.net
| Abstract |
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Methods. From June 1994 to December 2000, OPCAB was performed in 2,320 patients and compared with 8,069 patients who had on-pump coronary artery bypass grafting, during the same period of time. The patients undergoing OPCAB were randomly matched to on-pump patients by propensity score. A logistic regression model was used to test the difference in the postoperative stroke rate between OPCAB and on-pump procedures controlling for the correlation between matched sets. A multiple logistic regression model predicting the risk of stroke adjusted by stroke risk factors and operation type was also computed.
Results. Matches by propensity score were found for 72% of the patients undergoing OPCAB. Patients undergoing on-pump coronary artery bypass grafting were 1.8 (95% confidence interval 1.0 to 3.1, p = 0.03) times more likely to suffer a stroke postoperatively than OPCAB patients after controlling for preoperative risk factors through matching. Independent predictors of stroke identified from the multiple logistic model included on-pump operation (versus OPCAB operation), female gender, 4 to 6 vessels grafted (versus <4 grafts), hypertension, history of previous cerebrovascular accident, carotid artery disease, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, and depressed ejection fraction.
Conclusions. Off-pump cardiopulmonary bypass avoids the risks of cardiopulmonary bypass and atrial trauma. A substantially lower stroke rate suggests that OPCAB is a neurologically safe treatment option for revascularization.
| Introduction |
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Previous studies have identified risk factors of perioperative stroke after CABG with cardiopulmonary bypass (on-pump CABG) [3, 4]. Among them the most widely accepted are advanced age [4], length of cardiopulmonary bypass [5], previous cerebrovascular accident [4], carotid artery disease [4], hypertension [4], diabetes [4], and atrial fibrillation [4]. Initial evidence for lower overall postoperative cognitive dysfunction after CABG without cardiopulmonary bypass (OPCAB) was also reported [4, 68]. However, the absence of statistical analytical tools to match for the two types of operations significantly limits the validity of the results of previous reports [69].
In addition to a wide variability in the sample sizes studied, previous studies have evaluated many different variables in a nonuniform manner. To systematically investigate whether OPCAB is associated with a lower in-hospital stroke rate than the conventional on-pump CABG in a large clinical setting, we conducted this study, which includes the latest 5-year cumulative experience of CABG.
| Material and methods |
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Operative technique and selection criteria
Standard anesthesia and surgical techniques, extracorporeal circulation, and myocardial protection methods were used with on-pump CABG. Proximal anastomoses were performed using cross-clamp of the aorta. Very few if any T-grafts were used either with either the on-pump or OPCAB approach.
Off-pump CABG was performed using one of three surgical approaches: median sternotomy and anterior or lateral minimally invasive direct coronary artery bypass. A median sternotomy approach was favored in grafting of the right coronary artery or posterior descending branch. Main indications for anterior minimally invasive direct coronary artery bypass included isolated proximal disease of the left anterior descending or first diagonal artery, and the principal indication for lateral minimally invasive direct coronary artery bypass was bypass regrafting of the circumflex system.
Definitions
Previous stroke was defined as history of a central neurologic deficit persisting for more than 72 hours. Chronic renal insufficiency was defined as a serum creatinine value
2.0 mg/dL. Diabetes was defined as a history of diabetes mellitus, regardless of duration of disease or need for oral agents or insulin. Recent myocardial infarction was defined as a myocardial infarction occurring within 24 hours before CABG. Prolonged ventilation was defined as the need for respiratory support for more than 24 hours. Perioperative myocardial infarction was diagnosed by the following criteria: prolonged (>20 minutes) typical angina, creatine phosphokinase-MB fraction enzyme elevation more than 40 mg/dL, and serial electrocardiogram (at least two) showing new ischemic changes. Low cardiac output syndrome was defined as the use of postoperative inotropic support for more than 24 hours. Postoperative stroke was defined as any new neurologic deficit presenting in hospital and persisting more than 72 hours.
Anesthesia and intraoperative monitoring
Routine hemodynamic, electrocardiographic, and arterial blood gas monitoring were performed during the procedures. The anesthetic protocol for OPCAB has been described elsewhere [9]. Postoperative pain control was achieved with intravenous doses of propofol (50 mg/kg) and morphine (2 mg), as needed.
Statistical analysis
Univariate comparisons of operative and postoperative characteristics were performed between the on-pump CABG and OPCAB groups using the Mantel-Haenszel
2 test of general association unless stated otherwise. Ordinal categorical data were compared using the Cochran-Armitage test for trends. Continuous data were compared using the Wilcoxon rank test. All tests are two-sided and p values of 0.05 or less were considered significant.
Logistic regression was used to calculate the probability of being selected for on-pump CABG given a set of preoperative risk factors. These factors were identified from the literature as being associated with a stroke outcome and included age, gender, diabetes, hypertension, congestive heart failure, recent myocardial infarction, previous cerebrovascular accident, carotid artery disease, chronic renal failure on hemodialysis, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, ejection fraction, case priority, and previous CABG [4, 10]. The number of vessels grafted and year of operation were also included. The number of vessels grafted was used as a gross indicator of severity of disease. Year of operation was included to control for variation in surgical practices over time. Model fit was evaluated using the Hosmer and Lemeshow goodness-of-fit statistic and residual analysis. The c-statistic is reported as a measure of predictive power. The presence of linear dependencies or correlation among the independent variables (multicollinearity) was checked using diagnostics from ordinary logistic regression (tolerance and the variance inflation factor) [11]. Models, which include variables that are highly correlated, produce poor estimates of their effects on the dependent variable. Propensity scores [12] or the probability of being selected for on-pump CABG were computed from these models. Patients who had OPCAB were randomly matched to those who had on-pump CABG on propensity score. By matching on propensity score, the on-pump and off-pump cases have nearly equal proportions of the preoperative variables. The matching controls for potentially confounding variables. The general estimating method [13] was used in a logistic regression to test the difference in the postoperative stroke rate between OPCAB and on-pump CABG controlling for the correlation between matched sets. For comparison purposes, a multiple logistic regression model predicting the risk of stroke adjusted by stroke risk factors and type of operation on the entire cohort was also computed. Collinearity diagnostics were carried out as in the models described. Likelihood confidence intervals were computed. Model fit was assessed using residual analysis, Hosmer and Lemeshow goodness-of-fit statistic, and the c-statistic.
| Results |
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| Comment |
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Off-pump CABG has been used with increasing frequency in the past decade. Compared with on-pump CABG, OPCAB has been associated with decreased foreign surface/blood interactions and shear response, lower atrial fibrillation [14], stroke rates [15], and improved perioperative outcomes. The decreased organ dysfunction obtained with OPCAB has been largely ascribed to the avoidance of the systemic inflammatory response elicited by the cardiopulmonary bypass circuit [16]. Moreover, as previously reported the incidence of atrial fibrillation after OPCAB is lower than after the conventional approach, mostly related to the period of myocardial ischemia, the required atrial cannulation, and the adverse effects of cardioplegia [15]. Inadequate atrial protection has been demonstrated to be a trigger responsible for the development of atrial fibrillation in vulnerable patients [17] and therefore of thromboembolic events after on-pump CABG.
Cerebral microemboli generated during CABG with cardiopulmonary bypass might be implicated in postoperative neurologic impairment [16, 17]. The principal cause of neuropsychologic impairment after on-pump CABG was suggested to be diffuse microischemia secondary to cerebral microemboli [17]. Taylor and colleagues [17] correlated cerebral microemboli with transcranial Doppler studies and found that the greatest number of emboli were air emboli that occurred during interventions by the perfusionist (blood sampling and injections). Moody and associates [18], however, documented the presence of multiple atherosclerotic emboli lodged in the capillaries of the brain after conventional CABG. Previous investigators have also found an association between prolonged cardiopulmonary bypass time (>120 minutes) and increased risk of postoperative stroke [19]. Similarly, previous studies have demonstrated a lower release of S100B protein (a marker of brain injury) [20] and a lower incidence of high intensive transient signals in transcranial Doppler ultrasound after OPCAB versus on-pump CABG [21]. These findings emphasize the unfavorable effects of cardiopulmonary bypass on the subsequent development of stroke. In the present study, OPCAB was associated with a significantly lower stroke rate than on-pump CABG.
In addition, comorbid conditions such as previous cerebrovascular accident [5], carotid artery disease [22], hypertension [23], advanced age [24], chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, and depressed ejection fraction [5], have been found in this and previous studies to predict postoperative stroke. Interestingly, female gender in our study was associated with a higher occurrence of stroke. Female gender has been recognized as a predictor of operative mortality in a previous study [25], partially because of late referral pattern of women and possibly because of their smaller coronary arteries, which makes myocardial revascularization more demanding and the frequency of postoperative adverse events, including stroke, higher [25].
Clinical implications
Our study demonstrated an improved clinical outcome and a lower stroke rate after OPCAB versus on-pump CABG. The heightened stroke rate documented after on-pump CABG might be related to the postoperative organ dysfunction triggered by the cardiopulmonary bypass and the systemic inflammatory response it elicits (postpump syndrome). Increased capillary permeability and slight postoperative brain edema may be important corollaries of the neurologic dysfunction after on-pump CABG [23]. An amplification of these phenomena by the microemboli load has to be considered as well [23]. Avoidance of cardiopulmonary bypass is also associated with significantly lower in-hospital mortality, emphasizing the deleterious effects of the cardiopulmonary bypass in early patient survival [26, 27].
Technical improvements and better stabilization have also facilitated an increase in the rate of revascularization procedures performed on the beating heart. In our series, OPCAB became more routine overtime (on 1994 only 2% of coronary procedures were done on a beating heart, whereas the respective value for 2000 was 24%).
Limitations
A limitation of our study is that it used a retrospective single institution methodology. Despite the fact that this is among the larger analyses to date relating cardiopulmonary bypass to a higher incidence of stroke, all the limitations of a single institution study apply. Furthermore, as with our previous study on predictors of stroke after conventional on-pump CABG [4], the occurrence of clinically obvious stroke, the outcome measure of the present study might underestimate the postoperative cognitive impairment or delirium conditions. Although evaluation by an independent neurologist or brain imaging was a routine during the period of the study, there was no neuropsychologic testing that would have enabled the assessment of more subtle neurocognitive impairment, which may represent multiple territory cerebral microinfarcts [4]. Long-term efficacy and durability of minimally invasive versus conventional coronary artery operations also remains to be answered.
Another limitation was that we detected aortic arteriosclerosis by surgical palpation and not by ultrasonography; however, surgical palpation, when positive, has a high degree of specificity, as reported by Wolman and colleagues [28] in a 24-institution study. The reason we have not used ultrasonography was because it was not always available or considered to be the standard of care at the time the study was performed.
In conclusion, OPCAB is associated with a lower stroke rate as compared to the conventional on-pump CABG. However, the lack of comparative data on long-term outcomes emphasizes that these retrospective initial reports need to be validated by further studies. Thorough scientific analysis in a prospective randomized setting should ideally be performed for all surgical management paradigms.
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