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Active Not RecruitingNCT05166863

Physical Performance Testing and Frailty in Prediction of Early Postoperative Course After Cardiac Surgery

Status
Active Not Recruiting
Phase
Study type
Observational
Enrollment
200 (actual)
Sponsor
Jan Gofus, MD, PhD · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
60 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

Standard risk prediction models in cardiac surgery (such as EuroSCORE II or STS score) are designed to analyze solely the risk of short-term postoperative mortality. The postoperative morbidity, the ability to rehabilitate or the mid-term survival are not addressed by these means. Recently there have been some reports that addition of physical performance testing to the standard prediction models may provide prognostic value. There is a wide scale of various physical performance and frailty tests that could be used for this purpose, but they have not been confronted with each other yet. Moreover, the postoperative physical rehabilitation has not been objectively assessed in larger scale despite the significant improvement in technology. The hypothesisis of the study is that the preoperative outcomes of physical performance and frailty testing are able to predict the patient's reconvalescence after cardiac surgery in the short- and mid-term postoperatively. The aim is to analyze a set of tests with regard to their ability to predict postoperative reconvalescence, including the objective activity assessment (using Actigraph wGT3X-BT activity tracking device). Secondarily, the investigators aim to follow the patients up to 1 year postoperatively in terms of evaluating their mid-term outcomes.

Detailed description

Detailed description of testing performed in the exact order as in the patient: 1. Body weight and body composition (weigth of fat, weigth of muscle) measurement using bioimpendance scale Tanita BC 545N. 2. Katz Index of Independence in Activites of Daily Living performed and assessed exactly as described elsewhere. 3. Hand-grip strength test using the Kern MAP 80K1 device. Modified Southhampton protocol will be used for the measurement: Patient is sitting on a chair without side arms, the elbows are in a right angle. The patient is instructed to squeeze the device as much as possible and hold for 3 seconds. He squeezes the device with the right hand, then with the left hand. This is performed two times with each hand in total. The highest measured value is recorded. 4. 5-meter gait test. Patient is instructed to walk the 5-meter line as fast as possible and the time is being measured. This is repeated three times. Average time of the three attempts is recorded. 5. 6-minute walk test. Patient is instructed to walk without interruption for 6 minutes in the corridor of department's standard ward (exactly 36 meters long). He walks there and back repeatedly and the walked distance is calculated with regard to the number of corridors walked. 6. During the last two tests patient is wearing a pulse oxymeter (Berry BM1000C) that is connected with investigator's smartphone (either Android or iOS) through bluetooth. Eventual latent respiratory failure is recorded, defined as a drop in peripheral saturation of 4 % and more, or under 88 %. 7. Pre-defined set of laboratory blood tests: haemoglobin, creatinin, albumin, TSH, free T3, free T4.

Conditions

Timeline

Start date
2021-04-29
Primary completion
2023-12-30
Completion
2024-12-30
First posted
2021-12-22
Last updated
2024-05-08

Locations

1 site across 1 country: Czechia

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT05166863. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.