Period-dependent Associations between Hypotension during and for Four Days after Noncardiac Surgery and a Composite of Myocardial Infarction and Death

Daniel I. Sessler(University of Copenhagen), Christian S. Meyhoff(University of Copenhagen), Nicole M. Zimmerman(University of Copenhagen), Guangmei Mao(University of Copenhagen), Kate Leslie(University of Copenhagen), Skarlet Marcell Vásquez(University of Copenhagen), Packianathaswamy Balaji(University of Copenhagen), Jesús Álvarez‐García(University of Copenhagen), Alexandre Biasi Cavalcanti(University of Copenhagen), Joel L. Parlow(University of Copenhagen), Prashant Rahate(University of Copenhagen), Manfred D. Seeberger(University of Copenhagen), Bruno Gossetti(University of Copenhagen), Simon Walker(University of Copenhagen), Rajendra Kumar Premchand(University of Copenhagen), Rikke M Dahl(University of Copenhagen), Emmanuelle Duceppe(University of Copenhagen), Reitze Rodseth(University of Copenhagen), Fernando Botto(University of Copenhagen), P.J. Devereaux(University of Copenhagen)
Anesthesiology
November 21, 2017
Cited by 305Open Access
Full Text

Abstract

BACKGROUND: The relative contributions of intraoperative and postoperative hypotension to perioperative morbidity remain unclear. We determined the association between hypotension and a composite of 30-day myocardial infarction and death over three periods: (1) intraoperative, (2) remaining day of surgery, and (3) during the initial four postoperative days. METHODS: This was a substudy of POISE-2, a 10,010-patient factorial-randomized trial of aspirin and clonidine for prevention of myocardial infarction. Clinically important hypotension was defined as systolic blood pressure less than 90 mmHg requiring treatment. Minutes of hypotension was the exposure variable intraoperatively and for the remaining day of surgery, whereas hypotension status was treated as binary variable for postoperative days 1 to 4. We estimated the average relative effect of hypotension across components of the composite using a distinct effect generalized estimating model, adjusting for hypotension during earlier periods. RESULTS: Among 9,765 patients, 42% experienced hypotension, 590 (6.0%) had an infarction, and 116 (1.2%) died within 30 days of surgery. Intraoperatively, the estimated average relative effect across myocardial infarction and mortality was 1.08 (98.3% CI, 1.03, 1.12; P < 0.001) per 10-min increase in hypotension duration. For the remaining day of surgery, the odds ratio was 1.03 (98.3% CI, 1.01, 1.05; P < 0.001) per 10-min increase in hypotension duration. The average relative effect odds ratio was 2.83 (98.3% CI, 1.26, 6.35; P = 0.002) in patients with hypotension during the subsequent four days of hospitalization. CONCLUSIONS: Clinically important hypotension-a potentially modifiable exposure-was significantly associated with a composite of myocardial infarction and death during each of three perioperative periods, even after adjustment for previous hypotension.


Related Papers

No related papers found

Powered by citation graph analysis