Associations between intraoperative hypotension, duration of surgery and postoperative myocardial injury after noncardiac surgery: a retrospective single-centre cohort study

Publication date

2022-10

Authors

Wesselink, E M
Wagemakers, Sjors H.
van Waes, JARISNI 0000000392743743
Wanderer, Jonathan P.
van Klei, W. A.ISNI 0000000396755004
Kappen, T. H.ORCID 0000-0003-1895-0998ISNI 0000000394235275

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Abstract

Background: Studies of intraoperative hypotension typically specify a blood pressure threshold associated with adverse outcomes. Such thresholds are likely to be study-biased, investigator-biased, or both. We hypothesised that a newly developed modelling method without a threshold, which is biologically more plausible than a threshold-based approach, would reveal a continuous association between exposure to intraoperative hypotension and adverse outcomes. Methods: Single-centre, retrospective cohort study of subjects ≥60 yr old undergoing noncardiac surgery. We modelled intraoperative hypotension using three different approaches: (1) unweighted, (2) weighted for degree of hypotension (depth), and (3) weighted for duration of hypotension. The primary outcome was myocardial injury, defined as elevated troponin I (>60 ng L−1) measured during the first 3 days after surgery. The associations between the three models, postoperative myocardial injury, and mortality (secondary outcome) were reported as penalised adjusted odds ratios (ORs) scaled between the 75th and 25th percentiles. Results: Myocardial injury occurred in 1812/15 452 (12%) procedures, with 554/15 452 (3.6%) procedures resulting in death before discharge from hospital. The unweighted lower blood pressure measure (OR: 0.26, 95% confidence interval [CI]: 0.12–0.53) and the depth-weighted measure (OR: 4.4, 95% CI: 2.6–7.4) were associated with myocardial injury. The duration-weighted measure was not associated with myocardial injury (OR: 0.89, 95% CI: 0.61–1.3). The unweighted measure (OR 0.08, 95% CI: 0.01–0.40) and the depth-weighted measure (OR: 12, 95% CI, 3.8–35) were associated with in-hospital mortality, but not the duration-weighted measure (OR: 1.3, 95% CI: 0.53–3.0). Conclusions: Intraoperative hypotension appears to have a graded association with postoperative myocardial injury and mortality, with depth appearing to contribute more than duration.

Keywords

blood pressure, hypotension, mortality, myocardial injury, noncardiac surgery, Troponin I, Heart Injuries, Humans, Postoperative Complications/epidemiology, Retrospective Studies, Hypotension/complications, Cohort Studies, Anesthesiology and Pain Medicine, Journal Article

Citation

Wesselink, E M, Wagemakers, S H, van Waes, J A R, Wanderer, J P, van Klei, W A & Kappen, T H 2022, 'Associations between intraoperative hypotension, duration of surgery and postoperative myocardial injury after noncardiac surgery : a retrospective single-centre cohort study', British Journal of Anaesthesia, vol. 129, no. 4, pp. 487-496. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.bja.2022.06.034