Exercise Capacity and Mortality among Men Referred for Exercise Testing

Jonathan Myers(VA Palo Alto Health Care System), Manish Prakash(VA Palo Alto Health Care System), Victor F. Froelicher(VA Palo Alto Health Care System), Dat Do(VA Palo Alto Health Care System), Sara L. Partington(VA Palo Alto Health Care System), J. Edwin Atwood(VA Palo Alto Health Care System)
New England Journal of Medicine
March 14, 2002
Cited by 4,089Open Access
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Abstract

Exercise capacity is known to be an important prognostic factor in patients with cardiovascular disease, but it is uncertain whether it predicts mortality equally well among healthy persons. There is also uncertainty regarding the predictive power of exercise capacity relative to other clinical and exercise-test variables.We studied a total of 6213 consecutive men referred for treadmill exercise testing for clinical reasons during a mean (+/-SD) of 6.2+/-3.7 years of follow-up. Subjects were classified into two groups: 3679 had an abnormal exercise-test result or a history of cardiovascular disease, or both, and 2534 had a normal exercise-test result and no history of cardiovascular disease. Overall mortality was the end point.There were a total of 1256 deaths during the follow-up period, resulting in an average annual mortality of 2.6 percent. Men who died were older than those who survived and had a lower maximal heart rate, lower maximal systolic and diastolic blood pressure, and lower exercise capacity. After adjustment for age, the peak exercise capacity measured in metabolic equivalents (MET) was the strongest predictor of the risk of death among both normal subjects and those with cardiovascular disease. Absolute peak exercise capacity was a stronger predictor of the risk of death than the percentage of the age-predicted value achieved, and there was no interaction between the use or nonuse of beta-blockade and the predictive power of exercise capacity. Each 1-MET increase in exercise capacity conferred a 12 percent improvement in survival.Exercise capacity is a more powerful predictor of mortality among men than other established risk factors for cardiovascular disease.


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