Skip to main content
Advertisement
Browse Subject Areas
?

Click through the PLOS taxonomy to find articles in your field.

For more information about PLOS Subject Areas, click here.

  • Loading metrics

Forced Expiratory Volume in One Second Predicts Length of Stay and In-Hospital Mortality in Patients Undergoing Cardiac Surgery: A Retrospective Cohort Study

  • David A. McAllister ,

    david.mcallister@ed.ac.uk

    Affiliation Centre for Population Health Sciences, University of Edinburgh, Midlothian, Edinburgh, United Kingdom

  • Sarah H. Wild,

    Affiliation Centre for Population Health Sciences, University of Edinburgh, Midlothian, Edinburgh, United Kingdom

  • John D. MacLay,

    Affiliation MRC Centre for Inflammation Research, University of Edinburgh, Midlothian, Edinburgh, United Kingdom

  • Andrew Robson,

    Affiliation Respiratory Unit and Respiratory Function Service, Western General Hospital, Midlothian, Edinburgh, United Kingdom

  • David E. Newby,

    Affiliation Centre for Cardiovascular Science, University of Edinburgh, Midlothian, Edinburgh, United Kingdom

  • William MacNee,

    Affiliation MRC Centre for Inflammation Research, University of Edinburgh, Midlothian, Edinburgh, United Kingdom

  • J. Alastair Innes,

    Affiliation Respiratory Unit and Respiratory Function Service, Western General Hospital, Midlothian, Edinburgh, United Kingdom

  • Vipin Zamvar,

    Affiliation Department of Cardiothoracic Surgery, Royal Infirmary of Edinburgh, Midlothian, Edinburgh, United Kingdom

  • Nicholas L. Mills

    Affiliation Centre for Cardiovascular Science, University of Edinburgh, Midlothian, Edinburgh, United Kingdom

Abstract

Objective

An aging population and increasing use of percutaneous therapies have resulted in older patients with more co-morbidity being referred for cardiac surgery. Objective measurements of physiological reserve and severity of co-morbid disease are required to improve risk stratification. We hypothesised that FEV1 would predict mortality and length of stay following cardiac surgery.

Methods

We assessed clinical outcomes in 2,241 consecutive patients undergoing coronary artery bypass grafting and/or valve surgery from 2001 to 2007 in a regional cardiac centre. Generalized linear models of the association between FEV1 and length of hospital stay and mortality were adjusted for age, sex, height, body mass index, socioeconomic status, smoking, cardiovascular risk factors, long-term use of bronchodilators or steroids for lung disease, and type and urgency of surgery. FEV1 was compared to an established risk prediction model, the EuroSCORE.

Results

Spirometry was performed in 2,082 patients (93%) whose mean (SD) age was 67 (10) years. Median hospital stay was 3 days longer in patients in the lowest compared to the highest quintile for FEV1, 1.35-fold higher (95% CI 1.20–1.52; p<0.001). The adjusted odds ratio for mortality was increased 2.11-fold (95% CI 1.45–3.08; p<0.001) per standard deviation decrement in FEV1 (800 ml). FEV1 improved discrimination of the EuroSCORE for mortality. Similar associations were found after excluding people with known pulmonary disease and/or airflow limitation on spirometry.

Conclusions

Reduced FEV1 strongly predicted increased length of stay and in-hospital mortality following cardiac surgery. FEV1 is a widely available measure of physiological health that may improve risk stratification of complex patients undergoing cardiac surgery and should be evaluated for inclusion in new prediction tools.

Introduction

For more than 40 years cardiac surgery has been performed to relieve symptoms and improve outcomes in patients with coronary artery and valvular heart disease. [1] Whilst improvements in surgical technique have resulted in progressive reductions in operative morbidity and mortality, the aging population and increasing use of percutaneous treatments have resulted in older patients with more co-morbidity being referred for cardiac surgery. [2].

Several prognostic indices have been developed to help patients and clinicians decide whether cardiac surgery is appropriate. The European System for Cardiac Operative Risk Evaluation (EuroSCORE) is a widely used risk prediction tool that comprises seventeen clinical features, [3] and has good discrimination for early and late post-operative mortality. [4] It is recognised that changes in surgical practice over the last decade require these clinical tools to be updated. [5] With increasingly elderly patients being considered for surgical management, markers which reflect general physiological reserve and severity of co-morbid disease may be particularly relevant to prognosis and should be evaluated for inclusion in new risk prediction tools.

Forced Expiratory Volume in one second (FEV1) is a robust accurate measure of pulmonary physiology, and is a strong predictor of mortality from cardiovascular, respiratory and other causes, independent of age, gender, race/ethnicity, socioeconomic status, blood pressure, diabetes and cholesterol, and has been found to predict mortality in patients undergoing oesophagectomy.[6][8] However, studies directly examining whether FEV1 predicts outcomes in cardiac surgery have been limited to small numbers of patients with known pulmonary disease. [9], [10] As such, the relationship between FEV1 and clinical outcomes following cardiac surgery has not been established, particularly in patients without known pulmonary disease.

We hypothesised that FEV1 would predict length of hospital stay and in-hospital mortality independent of a clinical history of pulmonary disease and other potential confounders, and that the addition of FEV1 to the EuroSCORE would improve risk stratification in patients undergoing cardiac surgery.

Patients and Methods

Database Linkage was approved by Lothian Caldicott Officer and the Chair of Lothian Research Ethics Committee advised that the use of the fully irreversibly anonymised data for this research did not require ethical approval by the full committee.

Study Population

In a retrospective cohort study we identified all patients aged 40 years or older who underwent coronary artery bypass grafting (CABG) and/or valve repair or replacement surgery from January 1st 2001 to December 31st 2007 at the Royal Infirmary of Edinburgh, Scotland, United Kingdom. Patients who were not resident in the hospital catchment area or who underwent cardiac surgery as an emergency were excluded a priori on the basis that spirometry would not have been performed locally or would not have been feasible prior to surgery. Where patients had more than one operation during the study period, only the first operation was included.

Clinical Characteristics and Outcomes

Patient characteristics and details of their cardiac surgery, including length of hospital stay and in-hospital mortality, were obtained from medical records and recorded in an electronic cardiac surgical database (TOMCAT Clinical Systems, Philips Healthcare, Amsterdam, The Netherlands) by trained staff at the time of admission. Hospital stay was defined as a single continuous NHS stay following surgery, excluding long-term facilities. In-hospital mortality was defined as any death within this stay. This database is maintained to nationally agreed standards, which includes auditing of randomly sampled medical records and publication of statistics on missing data (www.scts.org/sections/audit/Cardiac/index.html). In an external Scottish Quality Improvement Programme audit in 2008 these data were found to be 98.5% accurate.

An estimate of predicted operative mortality was derived using the EuroSCORE (excluding the following variables which were not included in the linked dataset - active endocarditis, critical pre-operative state, or post-infarct septal rupture). [5](3) The EuroSCORE defines ‘chronic pulmonary disease’ as the long term use of bronchodilators or steroids for lung disease. Patient or clinician reported diagnoses of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) and asthma were also recorded. The 2006 Scottish Index of Multiple Deprivation (SIMD) score was obtained from the recorded postal code and patients were stratified based on the national distribution of the SIMD in order to provide an area-based measure of socio-economic status (www.scotland.gov.uk/Publications/2005/10/1893201/32023).

Spirometry

Height and weight were measured, and spirometry was performed on a wedge bellows spirometer to Association for Respiratory Technology and Physiology/British Thoracic Society standards (Model S, Vitalograph, Buckinghamshire UK) by trained clinical physiologists in one of two pulmonary function laboratories. FEV1 percent predicted was calculated using the European Coal and Steel reference equations. [11] Airflow obstruction was defined a priori as an FEV1/FVC ratio below 0.7 and FEV1 percent predicted less than 80% according to UK national guidance (http://guidance.nice.org.uk/CG12). A broader definition of airflow obstruction for use in sensitivity analyses included all patients with an FEV1/FVC ratio below 0.7 regardless of the FEV1 percent predicted. We did not measure post bronchodilator spirometry, and therefore in order to estimate the likely prevalence of COPD according to international guidelines (www.goldcopd.com and www.thoracic.org/clinical/copd-guidelines), which require post-bronchodilator spirometry, we used the difference in prevalence of airflow obstruction between pre and post bronchodilator spirometry in the international PLATINO COPD prevalence study [12] to adjust the proportion of patients with FEV1/FVC ratio below 0.7 in our cohort.

Record Linkage

Records from the cardiac surgery database were linked to the spirometry database for the same period. Within a secure health service environment, date of birth, first name and surname were used to link records using Microsoft Access 2000. Personal identifiers and dates were removed following linkage and the irreversibly anonymised database was used for analysis. Where patients had spirometry performed more than once prior to surgery, the measure closest to the date of the operation was selected. Patient selection and matching were completed prior to all analyses.

Statistical Analysis

For descriptive purposes, characteristics were compared for patients with and without spirometry records and by quintile of FEV1 percent predicted, which is widely used in clinical practice. However, use of the current European prediction equations has been criticised on the grounds that they are not contemporary and were not obtained from original data. [13] As such, all formal analyses were performed using FEV1 with adjustment for age, sex, height and other covariates as appropriate. Proportional change in length of stay, and the odds ratio for in-hospital mortality were estimated by quintile of FEV1, and per one standard deviation decrement in FEV1, using linear regression of length of stay (log-transformed) and logistic regression respectively.

Although most epidemiological studies report FEV1 as the primary marker of impaired lung function, controversy continues as to whether FEV1, FVC or the FEV1/FVC ratio is the best predictor of mortality in populations not selected to have chronic lung disease. [14], [15] As such, the analyses were repeated with FVC and the FEV1/FVC ratio in addition to and as an alternative to the FEV1.

Discrimination of the existing EuroSCORE model was compared to a model including EuroSCORE and FEV1 using the area under the curve, [16] and the more sensitive net reclassification and integrated discrimination indices (NRI and IDI respectively). [17] The NRI compares models with and without a new marker of interest to estimate the proportion of patients more appropriately classified minus the proportion less appropriately classified under the new model. The IDI is a global measure of sensitivity weighted by specificity that is more sensitive than the area under the curve. Model calibration was compared using the le Cessie-van Houwelingen normal test statistic for the unweighted sum of squared errors [18].

In sensitivity analyses regression modelling was repeated following stratification by gender, smoking status, type and urgency of operation, and following exclusion of patients with a clinical history of asthma, COPD and long-term use of bronchodilators or steroids for lung disease, or airflow obstruction on spirometry. Generalised additive models were used to explore non-linearity. Where data were missing, multiple imputation was used as the main approach with listwise deletion sensitivity analyses. Analyses were performed in SAS 9.2 (Cary, North Carolina, USA) and R version 2.9.2 (R Foundation for Statistical Computing, Vienna, Austria).

Results

Records meeting matching criteria were available for 2,082 patients (93%) of the 2,241 patients from the regional cardiac surgery database who met the eligibility criteria. The 159 patients without spirometry were more likely to have required urgent surgery (70 versus 54%, p<0.001), and have a clinical history of COPD (3.8 versus 1.3%, p = 0.02), but were otherwise similar to the 2,082 with matching records.

In patients with spirometry performed the mean (SD) age was 67 (10) years and 1,451 (70%) were male (Table 1). Spirometry was performed in the same year as surgery in 90% of patients, and in the same or previous year in 97% (median (IQR) 3 (1 to 5) months after angiography). Most patients had a history of cigarette smoking with 52% ex-smokers and 15% current smokers, but a clinical diagnosis of COPD was only recorded in 28 (1.3%), asthma in 24 (1.2%) and long-term use of bronchodilators or steroids for lung disease in 20 (1.0%) patients. Airflow obstruction identified on spirometry (FEV1/FVC <0.7 and FEV1<80% predicted) was present in 318 (15%) patients, of these 80% had an FEV1>50% predicted, 17% had an FEV1 30–49% predicted and 3% had an FEV1 of <30%.

thumbnail
Table 1. Patient characteristics by quintile of FEV1 percent predicted.

https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0064565.t001

Using the broader definition of airflow obstruction requiring an FEV1/FVC ratio below 0.7 regardless of the FEV1 percent predicted, 511 (25%) patients had airflow limitation. Adjusting this estimate to account for the fact that a bronchodilator was not administered prior to spirometry [12] an estimated 18% of patients had airflow obstruction according to current international guidelines [19], [20] (Table S1).

Socioeconomic deprivation, urgent surgery, valve procedures, current smoking, diabetes mellitus, stroke, extra-cardiac arteriopathy (a history of claudication, documented carotid artery occlusion or >50% stenosis, or surgery for disease of the abdominal aorta, peripheral vasculature or carotid arteries), left ventricular impairment, pulmonary hypertension (systolic blood pressure >60 mmHg), atrial fibrillation and dyspnoea were more frequent in quintiles with lower FEV1 percent predicted than those in higher quintiles, but the proportion of patients with a >70% stenosis in one or more of the main coronary arteries was similar across FEV1 percent predicted quintiles (Table 1).

Length of Stay

Median hospital stay was 3 days longer amongst patients in the lowest quintile for FEV1 compared to patients in the highest quintile (1.53-fold longer; 95% CI 1.41–1.67; p<0.001), and this association persisted after adjusting for age, sex, height, body mass index, type of operation, urgency of procedure, deprivation score, smoking status, recent myocardial infarction, extracardiac arteriopathy, diabetes, hypertension, stroke, atrial fibrillation, left ventricular function, asthma, COPD, bronchodilator use, preoperative renal failure, and pre-operative angina and dyspnoea (1.35-fold longer; 95% CI 1.20–1.52; p<0.001) (Table 2).

Mortality

Strong associations were found for in-hospital mortality and FEV1 (Table 3). The unadjusted odds ratio (OR) for in-hospital death was 2.58-fold higher (95% CI 1.95–3.41; p<0.001) per standard deviation decrement in FEV1 (800 ml). FEV1 remained a strong predictor after adjusting for type of operation, smoking status, asthma, COPD, bronchodilator use, pre-operative angina and pre-operative dyspnoea (OR 2.11; 95%CI 1.45–3.08; p<0.001).

Airflow Obstruction on Spirometry and FEV1

Adjusting for the same covariates as in the main analyses, FEV1 continued to predict hospital stay (800 ml decrement in FEV1; 1.26-fold longer; 95% CI 1.08–1.48, p<0.001), and mortality (800 ml decrement in FEV1; 2.28 OR; 95% CI; 1.19–4.41; p = 0.01) after excluding individuals with airflow obstruction on spirometry. Similar results were obtained when a broader definition of airflow obstruction was used (FEV1/FVC ratio <0.70, regardless of FEV1 percent predicted, p<0.001, and p = 0.01 respectively).

Moreover, there was no suggestion that increased risk was confined to patients with low lung function (Figure 1). There was a suggestion of an inflection for both mortality and length of stay at higher levels of FEV1 (4 litres and above) but the data were relatively sparse at this level, the odds ratio for mortality continued to decline, and there was not statistically significant evidence of departure from linearity for either hospital stay or mortality (p = 0.13, and p = 0.28 respectively). Similar results were obtained following exclusion of patients with a clinical history of asthma, COPD, long-term use of bronchodilators or steroids for lung disease, or airflow obstruction (defined as FEV1/FVC <0.7) on spirometry (Figure 2).

thumbnail
Figure 1. Relationship between FEV1, length of stay and mortality.

a) Relative length of stay for a given FEV1 compared to the length of stay for the mean FEV1. b) Odds ratio for in-hospital mortality for a given FEV1 compared to the odds ratio for the mean FEV1. Estimates were obtained from generalized additive models using a loess smoothing function. A rug plot illustrates the density of the data for given value of FEV1. Significance tests for non-linearity were p = 0.13 and p = 0.28 respectively.

https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0064565.g001

thumbnail
Figure 2. Barplots of association between FEV1, and mortality in patients with and without a diagnosis of COPD or asthma, long-term use of bronchodilators or steroids for lung disease, and airflow obstruction on spirometry.

Estimates were obtained from generalized linear models adjusting for age, sex, height and body mass index, type of operation, smoking status, pre-operative angina, pre-operative dyspnoea, and, except where these patients were excluded, COPD and long-term use of bronchodilators or steroids for lung disease.

https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0064565.g002

In addition, similar associations were found among never smokers as among smokers and ex-smokers for length of stay (1.09-fold longer; 95% CI 1.01 to 1.07 and 1.13-fold longer; 95% CI 1.07 to 1.19 respectively) and mortality (OR 2.29; 95% CI 1.00 to 2.58 and OR 2.45; 95% CI 1.55 to 3.95 respectively), indicating that smoking related airflow obstruction is unlikely to be the major driver of the association between pulmonary function and outcomes.

FVC and the FEV1/FVC Ratio

In the fully adjusted models we obtained similar associations for hospital stay (1 SD decrement in FVC; 1.10-fold longer; 95% CI 1.06 to 1.16, p<0.001) and for mortality (1 SD decrement OR 2.04; 95% CI 1.35 to 3.08) for the FVC alone as we did for FEV1. Similar, but weaker associations were found for hospital stay and mortality for FEV1/FVC alone compared to FEV1 (p = 0.006, p = 0.06 respectively).

However, neither the FVC nor the FEV1/FVC ratio added significantly to the FEV1 for hospital stay (p = 0.97 and p = 0.84 respectively) or mortality (p = 0.12 and p = 0.57 respectively).

FEV1 Compared to the EuroSCORE

FEV1 remained strongly associated with mortality after adjusting for the EuroSCORE (OR 1.69; 95% CI 1.23–2.31, likelihood ratio statistic 11, 1 df, p<0.001). The area under the receiver operator characteristic curve (AUC) was higher for EuroSCORE than FEV1, but the difference was not statistically significant (AUC 0.78 and 0.74 respectively, p = 0.15). Similarly, the addition of FEV1 to the EuroSCORE increased the AUC when compared to the EuroSCORE alone (AUC of 0.80 and 0.78 respectively), but the difference was not statistically significant (p = 0.26).

However, comparing the area under the curve is known to be insensitive, hence some authors recommend the inclusion of more sensitive measures of discrimination (23) such as the Net Reclassification Index (NRI), [17] according to which 27% of patients (95% CI 4–51%, p<0.001) were more appropriately classified with the EuroSCORE alone than with FEV1 alone, while 36% of patients (95% CI 12–59%; p = 0.003) were more appropriately classified when FEV1 was combined with the EuroSCORE compared to the EuroSCORE alone. The Integrated Discrimination Index yielded similar results for each of these comparisons: EuroSCORE alone versus FEV1 alone (IDI 0.02; 95% CI 0.00–0.03; p = 0.01) and EuroSCORE alone versus FEV1 in combination with EuroSCORE (IDI = 0.01; 95% CI 0.00–0.02; p = 0.006). Model calibration was also better with FEV1 and EuroSCORE combined (z = 0.14; p = 0.89) than with the EuroSCORE alone (z = 1.27, p = 0.21).

Sensitivity Analyses

After stratifying by operation type similar associations were found for length of stay (800 ml decrement in FEV1; 1.10-fold longer [95% CI 1.01 to 1.21] and 1.12-fold longer [95% CI 1.07 to 1.17] for patients with and without valve surgery respectively) and mortality (1 SD decrement; OR 2.58 [95% CI 1.59 to 4.29] and OR 1.88 [95% CI 0.95 to 3.69] for patients with and without valve surgery respectively). Nor did stratification for urgency of procedure or gender reveal evidence of effect measure heterogeneity. Repeating analyses without adjustment for height yielded very similar associations for FEV1 for hospital; stay and mortality. Results obtained using listwise deletion were similar to those obtained using multiple imputation.

Discussion

FEV1 is a strong predictor of longer hospital stay and in-hospital mortality following elective and urgent cardiac surgery. These associations persist after adjusting for multiple covariates including a clinical diagnosis of COPD, and airflow obstruction on spirometry. Addition of FEV1 to the current and most widely used peri-operative risk prediction model, the EuroSCORE, improved discrimination and calibration for in-hospital mortality.

COPD is the commonest cause of reduced FEV1, [21] and is an established risk factor for in-hospital and long-term mortality following cardiac surgery.[22][24] Two recent studies reported that FEV1 was associated with poorer outcome in patients with chronic lung disease undergoing cardiac surgery, but due to the small number of patients with measured FEV1 (n<150), linearity was not assessed and adjustment for potential confounders was limited. [9], [10] Abadag et al [25] found that pulmonary function predicted increased mortality and length of stay in patients with cardiac surgery, but less than 45% of patients had spirometry measured, with the decision to measure pulmonary function having been made at each clinician’s discretion, making selection bias likely. Moreover, no comparisons within individuals with normal lung function were made. We examined the association between FEV1 and both hospital stay and in-hospital mortality across the spectrum of lung function, and found no evidence for a plateau at least until FEV1 was moderately high (3–4 litres), and that FEV1 predicted hospital stay and mortality even after excluding patients with any evidence of airflow obstruction on spirometry. This association persisted after controlling for other potentially important confounders including age, sex, cardiovascular risk factors and socioeconomic status.

In order to explore the potential usefulness of FEV1 for inclusion in risk prediction tools, we also examined the effect of the addition of FEV1 on discrimination (distinguishing patients with and without adverse events) and calibration (precision of estimates of risk of adverse events). [26] In a recent review of nineteen published risk prediction models the EuroSCORE was found to be the best discriminator for 30-day and one year mortality after cardiac surgery. [4] We found that FEV1 when combined with EuroSCORE improved discrimination compared to EuroSCORE alone. The area under the curve was higher, although the difference was not statistically significant, while the more powerful Net Reclassification Index was highly statistically significant, and estimated that over a third of patients would be assigned a more appropriate risk of in hospital death when FEV1 was combined with the EuroSCORE compared to the EuroSCORE alone. Calibration was also improved on adding FEV1 to the EuroSCORE. FEV1 appears to have additional value, beyond identifying patients with chronic lung disease, as an independent predictor of outcome in patients undergoing cardiac surgery.Moreover, FEV1 is not a costly new biomarker, but rather a widely available physiological measurement which we found was routinely performed in over 90% of patients undergoing elective and urgent cardiac surgery. FEV1 remains stable over time and can therefore be measured at an early stage of evaluation prior to cardiac surgery [27] and is therefore an attractive candidate for inclusion in prognostic models.

COPD particularly when mild or moderately severe is commonly under-diagnosed in primary care, [18] and the same appears to be true for patients undergoing cardiac surgery. Fewer than 2% had known COPD, lower than the 5% we would have expected based upon the age-sex distribution of our patients and national statistics on the proportion of patients diagnosed with COPD in this region of Scotland (www.isdscotland.org/isd/3707.html). Patients with clinically evident COPD may be less frequently selected for cardiac surgery. Nevertheless, fifteen percent had airflow obstruction on spirometry and a significant proportion of these are likely to have had COPD. As such, under-treatment of mild to moderate COPD (with, for example inadequate inhaled therapy) may contribute to the excess mortality associated with low FEV1, and the routine recording of spirometry during pre-assessment for surgery may improve treatment and clinical outcomes in these patients.

Undiagnosed COPD is unlikely to be the primary cause of excess morbidity and mortality since FEV1 predicted outcomes similarly well in patients without airflow obstruction, and among never smokers. Furthermore, similar associations were found for FVC as for FEV1, and the FEV1/FVC ratio did not have additional power over FEV1 alone. Reductions in FEV1 (and FVC) may reflect both increased exposure and susceptibility to pro-inflammatory factors, such as cigarette smoking, environmental pollution and microbial infection. FEV1 may also be influenced by pulmonary congestion secondary to valvular heart disease related which can cause both obstructive and restrictive abnormalities in pulmonary function. [28].

Alternatively, as previously suggested, reduced FEV1 may simply be an indicator of the patients’ capacity to withstand the insult of major surgery, reflecting their respiratory reserve, nutritional status or muscle strength. [14], [15] In the general population FEV1 predicts a range of adverse outcomes including, but not limited to cardiovascular, respiratory and even psychiatric illness. [6] Moreover, pulmonary function as measured by spirometry depends not only on lung characteristics such as airway diameter and lung elasticity, but also on skeletal muscle strength [29] (in the diaphragm and intercostal muscles) while pulmonary function also improves following bariatric surgery. [30] Therefore, we believe that FEV1 (and FVC) is likely to reflect the patient’s general capacity to withstand the insult of major surgery, and not just respiratory reserve.

FEV1 and FVC were highly correlated, and performed similarly in predicting length of hospital stay and mortality. However, the FEV1/FVC ratio was less strongly associated with these outcomes. As such, while FEV1/FVC is required, by definition to diagnose COPD, it appears be less useful than FEV1 and FVC as a prognostic marker following cardiac surgery, particularly if a single cut-off value (such as FEV1/FVC <0.7) is used. Therefore, cardiac surgery departments should consider recording the FEV1 and FVC in addition to the FEV1/FVC ratio. Although further multi-centre studies will be required to confirm that future cardiac surgery scores should include pulmonary function measures. Future studies examining cause-specific mortality and complication rates will also allow us to explore the mechanisms underlying the associations with FEV1 and mortality and length of stay.

Limitations

Not all patients had FEV1 measured immediately prior to surgery. However, most patients had FEV1 measured as part of their surgical pre-assessment, and the decline of FEV1 in both the general population and patients with COPD is low (approximately 30 ml/year [27], [31]) Changes in FEV1 between pre-assessment spirometry and the date of surgery, for example because patients are started on bronchodilator therapy, are likely to underestimate the strength of association with mortality and length of stay.

We did not record all known prognostic markers at the time of the matching and anonymisation, and did not include active endocarditis, critical pre-operative state, or post-infarct septal rupture in our EuroSCORE calculation. However, these clinical variables are present in less that 0.1% of patients undergoing urgent cardiac surgery in our regional centre (results not shown) and similar associations for FEV1 and length of stay and mortality were found even when restricting the analysis to elective surgery, making confounding by these ‘critical illness’ variables unlikely.

The purpose of this study was not to estimate the prevalence of under-diagnosis of COPD. However, we report the prevalence of airflow obstruction using UK COPD guidance current to the year of surgery for our patients (FEV1/FVC <0.7 and FEV1 less than 80% predicted). [32] Updated UK guidance and international guidelines [19], [20] do not require an FEV1 less than 80% predicted, but do stipulate the use of post bronchodilator spirometry. Nevertheless, we were able to adjust for the use of non-post bronchodilator spirometry using data from the international PLATINO study [12] to estimate that approximately 18% of patients are likely to have had post-bronchodilator obstruction, and therefore meet the current international criteria for diagnosis of COPD. However, importantly FEV1 predicted mortality and morbidity as well in patients without airflow obstruction (FEV1/FVC<0.7 and any report of asthma or COPD), and in never smokers as in the full cohort (Figure 2), suggesting that FEV1 is more likely to be a marker of frailty than solely a marker of airflow obstruction.

Conclusions

FEV1 is a strong and independent predictor of length of stay and in-hospital mortality following elective and urgent cardiac surgery, and improves the discrimination of existing risk prediction tools. Spirometry is a widely available non-invasive measure of physiological reserve that is commonly performed in older patients undergoing major surgery. FEV1 should be formally evaluated for inclusion in new cardiac surgery risk prediction tools with the goal of improving clinical outcomes in complex patients undergoing cardiac surgery.

Supporting Information

Table S1.

Comparison of prevalence of airflow obstruction (FEV1/FVC <0.7, ie COPD) in cardiac surgery patients compared to the prevalence of airflow obstruction with and without administration of a bronchodilator in an international prevalence study. BD – bronchodilator PLATINO – burden of obstructive lung disease. PLATINO defined low-risk subjects (a total of 1895) as patients who were asymptomatic, with low cigarette smoke exposure (<10 pack years, <200 hour-years of biomass smoke, <5 years exposed to dust) and who had no reported asthma or COPD. The remaining subjects were considered high-risk. We defined low risk as never smokers, and high risk as all other patients. * For each stratum the prevalence of airflow obstruction among the cardiac surgery patients was multiplied by the ratio of pre to post bronchodilator defined airflow obstruction from the PLATINO study to obtain the estimated prevalence of airflow obstruction on post-bronchodilator spirometry.

https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0064565.s001

(DOCX)

Acknowledgments

None of the authors has any relationship with industry that might have an interest in the submitted work, or any non-financial interests relevant to the submitted work. All authors must had full control of the design of the study, methods used, outcome parameters and results, analysis of data and production of the written report.

Author Contributions

Conceived and designed the experiments: DAM NLM. Analyzed the data: DAM SHW NLM. Contributed reagents/materials/analysis tools: JAI VZ AR. Wrote the paper: DAM SW NLM. Made critical revisions of the manuscript for important intellectual content: JDM JAI DEN WM VZ.

References

  1. 1. Eagle KA, Guyton RA, Davidoff R, Edwards FH, Ewy GA, et al. (2004) ACC/AHA 2004 guideline update for coronary artery bypass graft surgery: a report of the American College of Cardiology/American Heart Association Task Force on Practice Guidelines (Committee to Update the 1999 Guidelines for Coronary Artery Bypass Graft Surgery). Circulation 110: e340–437.
  2. 2. Peterson ED (2009) Innovation and Comparative-Effectiveness Research in Cardiac Surgery. N Engl J Med 361: 1897–1899
  3. 3. Nashef SA, Roques F, Michel P, Gauducheau E, Lemeshow S, et al. (1999) European system for cardiac operative risk evaluation (EuroSCORE). Eur J Cardiothorac Surg 16: 9–13
  4. 4. Nilsson J, Algotsson L, Hoglund P, Luhrs C, Brandt J (2006) Comparison of 19 pre-operative risk stratification models in open-heart surgery. Eur Heart J 27: 867–874
  5. 5. Nashef SAM (2009) Editorial comment: What to do with EuroSCORE in 2009? Eur J Cardiothorac Surg 36: 805–806
  6. 6. Hole DJ, Watt GCM, Davey-Smith G, Hart CL, Gillis CR, et al. (1996) Impaired lung function and mortality risk in men and women: findings from the Renfrew and Paisley prospective population study. BMJ 313: 711–715.
  7. 7. Friedman G, Klatsky A, Siegelaub A (1976) Lung function and risk of myocardial infarction and sudden cardiac death. N Engl J Med 294: 1071–1075.
  8. 8. Abunasra H, Lewis S, Beggs L, Duffy J, Beggs D, et al. (2005) Predictors of operative death after oesophagectomy for carcinoma. Br J Surg 92: 1029–1033
  9. 9. Fuster RG, Argudo JAM, Albarova OG, Sos FH, Lopez SC, et al. (2006) Prognostic value of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease in coronary artery bypass grafting. Eur J Cardiothorac Surg 29: 202–209
  10. 10. Lizak MK, Nash E, Zakliczyński M, Sliwka J, Knapik P, et al. (2009) Additional spirometry criteria predict postoperative complications after coronary artery bypass grafting (CABG) independently of concomitant chronic obstructive pulmonary disease: when is off-pump CABG more beneficial? Pol Arch Med Wewn 119: 550–557.
  11. 11. Quanjer PH, Tammeling GJ, Cotes JE, Pedersen OF, Peslin R, et al.. (1993) Lung volumes and forced ventilatory flows. Report Working Party Standardization of Lung Function Tests, European Community for Steel and Coal. Official Statement of the European Respiratory Society. Eur Respir J Suppl 16: 5–40.
  12. 12. Pérez-Padilla R, Hallal PC, Vázquez-García JC, Muiño A, Máquez M, et al. (2007) Impact of bronchodilator use on the prevalence of COPD in population-based samples. COPD 4: 113–120
  13. 13. Degens P, Merget R (2008) Reference values for spirometry of the European Coal and Steel Community: time for change. Eur Respir J 31: 687–688
  14. 14. Burney PGJ, Hooper R (2011) Forced vital capacity, airway obstruction and survival in a general population sample from the USA. Thorax 66: 49–54
  15. 15. Lange P (2011) Spirometric findings as predictors of survival. Thorax 66: 1–2
  16. 16. DeLong ER, DeLong DM, Clarke-Pearson DL (1988) Comparing the areas under two or more correlated receiver operating characteristic curves: a nonparametric approach. Biometrics 44: 837–845.
  17. 17. Pencina MJ, D’Agostino RB, D’Agostino RB, Vasan RS (2008) Evaluating the added predictive ability of a new marker: from area under the ROC curve to reclassification and beyond. Stat Med 27: 157–172
  18. 18. Hosmer DW, Hosmer T, Cessie SL, Lemeshow S (1997) AID-SIM509>3.0.CO;2-O.
  19. 19. Gold Executive Committee (2008) GOLD - the Global initiative for chronic Obstructive Lung Disease (Updated 2008). Available: http://www.goldcopd.com/Guidelineitem.asp?l1=2&l2=1&intId=2003. Accessed 2009 Oct 17.
  20. 20. Celli BR, MacNee W, Agusti A, Anzueto A, Berg B, et al. (2004) Standards for the diagnosis and treatment of patients with COPD: a summary of the ATS/ERS position paper. Eur Respir J 23: 932–946
  21. 21. Bednarek M, Maciejewski J, Wozniak M, Kuca P, Zielinski J (2008) Prevalence, severity and underdiagnosis of COPD in the primary care setting. Thorax 63: 402–407
  22. 22. Clough RA, Leavitt BJ, Morton JR, Plume SK, Hernandez F, et al. (2002) The Effect of Comorbid Illness on Mortality Outcomes in Cardiac Surgery. Arch Surg 137: 428–433
  23. 23. Rosenthal GE, Vaughan Sarrazin M, Hannan EL (2003) In-hospital mortality following coronary artery bypass graft surgery in Veterans Health Administration and private sector hospitals. Med Care 41: 522–535
  24. 24. Leavitt BJ, Ross CS, Spence B, Surgenor SD, Olmstead EM, et al. (2006) Long-Term Survival of Patients With Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease Undergoing Coronary Artery Bypass Surgery. Circulation 114: I430–I434
  25. 25. Adabag AS, Wassif HS, Rice K, Mithani S, Johnson D, et al. (2010) Preoperative pulmonary function and mortality after cardiac surgery. Am Heart J 159: 691–697
  26. 26. Cook NR (2007) Use and Misuse of the Receiver Operating Characteristic Curve in Risk Prediction. Circulation 115: 928–935
  27. 27. Lee DH, Buth KJ, Martin B-J, Yip AM, Hirsch GM (2010) Frail Patients Are at Increased Risk for Mortality and Prolonged Institutional Care After Cardiac Surgery. Circulation 121: 973–978
  28. 28. Dimopoulou I, Daganou M, Tsintzas OK, Tzelepis GE (1998) Effects of severity of long-standing congestive heart failure on pulmonary function. Respir Med 92: 1321–1325.
  29. 29. Mognoni P, Saibene F, Sant’ambrogio G (1969) Contribution of the diaphragm and the other inspiratory muscles to different levels of tidal volume and static inspiratory effort in the rabbit. J Physiol (Lond) 202: 517–534.
  30. 30. Wilms B, Ernst B, Thurnheer M, Weisser B, Schultes B (2013) Differential changes in exercise performance after massive weight loss induced by bariatric surgery. Obes Surg 23: 365–371
  31. 31. Tashkin DP, Celli B, Senn S, Burkhart D, Kesten S, et al. (2008) A 4-year trial of tiotropium in chronic obstructive pulmonary disease. N Engl J Med 359: 1543–1554
  32. 32. NICE (2004) Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease: Management of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease in primary and secondary care. Available: http://guidance.nice.org.uk/CG12.