Clinical Trials Directory

Trials / Completed

CompletedNCT02829203

Pre-Frailty Risk in Cardiovascular Surgery

Pre-Frailty Score as a Predictor Risk on Cardiovascular Surgery Outcome in Elderly

Status
Completed
Phase
Study type
Observational
Enrollment
221 (actual)
Sponsor
Instituto Dante Pazzanese de Cardiologia · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
65 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

Frailty is an important risk factor for cardiovascular disease (CVD), recent data has shown significant association between pre-frailty and the risk of incident for CVD, irrespective of any classical cardiometabolic risk factors, suggesting that targeting pre-frailty as a potentially reversible risk factor for CVD in the elderly. Patients with high levels of frailty have an increased risk in post-operative period, with more time in mechanical ventilation, length of stay and complications (stroke and death) compared to patients with low frailty levels. The investigators hypothesized that pre-frailty patients also have a higher surgical risk compared to no-frailty patients.

Detailed description

This was a prospective observational study involving patients over 65 years recruited from the Dante Pazzanese Institute of Cardiology. The patients had an established diagnosis of cardiovascular diseases (myocardial infarction or valve regurgitation) by previous electrocardiogram and/or Doppler echocardiography and all had surgical indication (coronary artery bypass, valve replacement or combined surgery). Patients with prior neurological disease (previous stroke or muscular dystrophies) or cognitive impairment resulting from previous injury or who refused to participate in the study were excluded. Twenty-four hours before the surgery patients were evaluated by Frailty score as described elsewhere and divided into 2 groups: No-Frailty (Frailty score 1 or 2) and Pre-Frailty (Frailty score 3 or 4). If the patient had Frailty score higher than 5 were excluded from the study. After surgery all patients were admitted at the intensive care unit (ICU) following the institutional mechanical ventilation protocol. Immediately after admission heart rate, mean arterial pressure, and oxygen pulse saturation (SpO2) were measured with a Dixtal monitor (DX 2010). After ICU admission all participants were followed up for main outcomes: hospital discharge, stroke, infection or death. In addition the investigators also measured length of stay, the duration of mechanical ventilation, vasopressors usage and the needed of physiotherapy indication after hospital discharge. All study participants receive medical and physiotherapy care according to the routine of the institution.

Conditions

Timeline

Start date
2015-05-01
Primary completion
2016-01-01
Completion
2016-02-01
First posted
2016-07-12
Last updated
2016-07-12

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT02829203. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.