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J Thorac Cardiovasc Surg 1999;117:298-301
© 1999 Mosby, Inc.
SURGERY FOR ADULT CARDIOVASCULAR DISEASE |
From the Division of Cardiothoracic Surgery, Department of Surgery, Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center and Harvard Medical School, Boston.
Received for publication March 23, 1998. Revisions requested May 12, 1998; revisions received July 1, 1998. Accepted for publication Sept 21, 1998. Address for reprints: Robert G. Johnson, MD, 330 Brookline Ave, Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center, Boston, MA 02215.
| Abstract |
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| Introduction |
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Minimally invasive direct CABG does not require atrial cannulation, cardiopulmonary bypass, or cardioplegic preservation. In this article we report the incidence of AF among patients undergoing minimally invasive direct CABG and compare it with the incidence among patients undergoing conventional CABG at the same institution. Our annual incidence of postoperative AF among patients undergoing solitary CABG (those undergoing no associated procedures) since 1985 has ranged from nearly 25% to 35%. Our postoperative AF incidence among our initial patients undergoing minimally invasive direct CABG was at the lower end of this range (24%, 13/55). From 1985 through 1996 our mean overall AF incidence for patients undergoing solitary CABG was 34.4%, but we and others have seen a direct relationship between age and postoperative AF. During those 10 years our postoperative AF incidences by decade of age among patients undergoing solitary CABG were 0%, 9%, 18%, 30%, 47%, 53%, and 100%, from the fourth through the 10th decades of life, respectively. To control for age as a factor affecting the incidence of postoperative AF, we sought to determine whether the incidence of postoperative AF would differ significantly between patients undergoing minimally invasive direct CABG and those undergoing conventional CABG if age-matched cohorts were examined.
| Methods |
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Patients treated before the operation for AF (4 in the minimally invasive direct CABG group and 82 in the conventional CABG group) were excluded from this review. After this initial review, to correct for the difference in mean age between the patients undergoing conventional CABG (66 ± 10.7 years) and the patients undergoing minimally invasive direct CABG, each patient undergoing minimally invasive direct CABG was matched with a patient undergoing conventional CABG, with age (± 3 years) and date of operation (± 7 days) as the sole criteria for this matching. No patient in the minimally invasive direct CABG group died while in the hospital, but there were 17 postoperative (in-hospital or within 30 days) deaths among the conventional CABG group. These patients were excluded from the matching process. The conventional CABG matching was done by one of us (C.S.), blinded to the patient's name or occurrence of postoperative AF, from the entire pool of eligible patients, first searching by age and then by nearest operative date. Fourteen of the 55 patients undergoing minimally invasive direct CABG had more than single left anterior descending coronary artery disease and were treated as part of a "culprit" strategy for patients thought to be at high risk for conventional CABG, and 33 of 55 patients had more than single-vessel disease according to preoperative angiography.
The data reviewed for all patients included age, sex, unstable angina at the time of operative admission, history of previous myocardial infarction, congestive heart failure, smoking history, preoperative left ventricular ejection fraction, number of distal grafts, postoperative weight gain, postoperative complications, and length of hospital stay. Mean postoperative weight gain was defined as the difference between the preoperative weight and the weight on the first postoperative morning. Perioperative myocardial infarctions were defined as the development of new Q waves not visible on a preoperative electrocardiogram. Heart failure was defined as a cardiac index less than 2.0 or inotropic support 6 hours after the operation. Ventilatory failure was defined by the requirement of mechanical ventilation for longer than 48 hours. Inotropes were generally used in patients with an index less than 2.0 L/min/m2 with right or left filling pressures greater than 18 mm Hg.
Continuous data were analyzed by comparison of the means with the Student t test. Median comparisons were made with the Wilcoxon signed rank test. Categoric data were compared with
2 analysis.
| Results |
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| Discussion |
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Chauhan and colleagues
4 recently reported a lower incidence of postoperative AF among patients undergoing minimally invasive direct CABG than among those undergoing standard CABG (12% vs 32%; P = .02). In their study population the mean age of the 96 patients undergoing standard CABG was greater than that of the 41 patients undergoing minimally invasive direct CABG, but they did not find age a significant predictor of postoperative AF. Our aged-matched comparison failed to demonstrate a lower incidence of postoperative AF among those undergoing minimally invasive direct CABG than among those undergoing conventional CABG. Age matching did not eliminate statistically significant differences in postoperative weight gain, inotrope use, ventilator time, or total length of hospital stay.
The fact that age matching eliminated the difference in postoperative AF incidence between conventional CABG and minimally invasive direct CABG groups is the critical point of our study. The likelihood of finding no significant difference when there was one (type II error) was extremely small because the incidence of postoperative AF was actually higher in the minimally invasive direct CABG group than in the conventional CABG group after age matching. Indeed, knowing that the incidence of postoperative AF in our population was 34.4% before any matching (all patients during the past 10 years) and that the incidence among our minimally invasive direct CABG cohort was 23.6%, there was a 31% difference in the incidence. If one accepts, as we certainly do, that a 30% reduction in AF is clinically significant and performs a sample size calculation for matched cohorts, with a 95% likelihood of detecting a statistically significant difference if there is one and a 95% certainty that this is not simply due to chance, one finds that the sample size required would be only 22. We had 55 pairs. Again, the important point is that we completely eliminated the difference in the incidence of AF between conventional CABG and minimally invasive direct CABG simply by correcting for age.
The etiology of postoperative AF is not known, and many mechanisms have been suggested. These mechanisms may be divided into intraoperative or postoperative factors. Most of the attention has been focused on the postoperative period and on prophylaxis.
5-8 No one has described intraoperative mechanisms through which the incidence of postoperative AF could be reduced, but such possibilities may exist. Better myocardial (specifically atrial) preservation or cooling in patients undergoing CABG has not been examined in a large study. Many of the intraoperative factors that are considered as potentially influential in the incidence of postoperative AF are related to cardiopulmonary bypass, global myocardial ischemia (crossclamping), and myocardial preservation. None of these mechanisms specifically applies to patients undergoing minimally invasive direct CABG.
Our data showed similar incidences of postoperative AF in the age-matched groups, so mechanisms common to both groups must be considered. The brief period of local ischemia related to transient coronary occlusion during construction of the distal anastomoses and the opening of the pericardium are 2 such factors. Although undocumented for patients undergoing minimally invasive direct CABG, the release of endogenous catecholamines after cardiopulmonary bypass has been well documented among patients undergoing conventional CABG, and this factor may apply to the minimally invasive direct CABG population as well. Clearly, consideration of these data can focus our efforts to reduce and manage the incidence of postoperative AF.
| References |
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