• Cardiology · Jan 2005

    Comparative Study

    Implementation of the ACC/AHA guidelines for preoperative cardiac risk assessment in a general medicine preoperative clinic: improving efficiency and preserving outcomes.

    • Yassar Almanaseer, Debabrata Mukherjee, Eva M Kline-Rogers, Sean K Kesterson, Seema S Sonnad, Bruce Rogers, Dean Smith, Scott Furney, Robert Ernst, Jane McCort, and Kim A Eagle.
    • The Michigan Cardiovascular Research and Reporting Program, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Mich., USA.
    • Cardiology. 2005 Jan 1;103(1):24-9.

    BackgroundThe American College of Cardiology/American Heart Association (ACC/AHA) publishes recommendations for cardiac assessment of patients undergoing noncardiac surgery with the intent of promoting evidence-based, efficient preoperative screening and management. We sought to study the impact of guideline implementation for cardiac risk assessment in a general internal medicine preoperative clinic.MethodsThe study was an observational cohort study of consecutive patients being evaluated in an outpatient preoperative evaluation clinic before and after implementation of the ACC/AHA guideline. Data was gathered by retrospective abstraction of hospital and clinic charts using standard definitions. 299 patients were reviewed prior to guideline implementation and their care compared to 339 consecutive patients after the guideline was implemented in the clinic.ResultsGuideline implementation led to a reduction in exercise stress testing (30.8% before, 16.2% after; p<0.001) and hospital length of stay (6.5 days before, 5.6 days after; p=0.055). beta-Blocker therapy increased after the intervention (15.7% before; 34.5% after; p<0.001) and preoperative test appropriateness improved (86% before to 94.1% after; p<0.001).ConclusionsImplementation of the ACC/AHA guidelines for cardiac risk assessment prior to noncardiac surgery in an internal medicine preoperative assessment clinic led to a more appropriate use of preoperative stress testing and beta-blocker therapy while preserving a low rate of cardiac complications.Copyright (c) 2005 S. Karger AG, Basel.

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