Eur J Cardiothorac Surg 1999 Jun;15(6):816-22; discussion 822-3
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Risk factors and outcome in European cardiac surgery:
analysis of the EuroSCORE multinational database of 19030 patients.
Roques F, Nashef SA, Michel P, Gauducheau E, de Vincentiis C, Baudet E,
Cortina J, David M, Faichney A, Gabrielle F, Gams E, Harjula A, Jones MT,
Pintor PP, Salamon R, Thulin L.
Service de chirurgie cardiovasculaire, CHU de Fort de France, Martinique,
France. f.r.fwi@wanadoo.fr
OBJECTIVE: To assess risk factors for mortality in cardiac surgical adult
patients as part of a study to develop a European System for Cardiac
Operative Risk Evaluation (EuroSCORE). METHODS: From September to November
1995, information on risk factors and mortality was collected for 19030
consecutive adult patients undergoing cardiac surgery under cardiopulmonary
bypass in 128 surgical centres in eight European states. Data were collected
for 68 preoperative and 29 operative risk factors proven or believed to
influence hospital mortality. The relationship between risk factors and
outcome was assessed by univariate and logistic regression analysis.
RESULTS: Mean age (+/- standard deviation) was 62.5+/-10.7 (range 17-94
years) and 28% were female. Mean body mass index was 26.3+/-3.9. The
incidence of common risk factors was as follows: hypertension 43.6%,
diabetes 16.7%, extracardiac arteriopathy 2.9%, chronic renal failure 3.5%,
chronic pulmonary disease 3.9%, previous cardiac surgery 7.3% and impaired
left ventricular function 31.4%. Isolated coronary surgery accounted for
63.6% of all procedures, and 29.8% of patients had valve operations. Overall
hospital mortality was 4.8%. Coronary surgery mortality was 3.4% In the
absence of any identifiable risk factors, mortality was 0.4% for coronary
surgery, 1% for mitral valve surgery, 1.1% for aortic valve surgery and 0%
for atrial septal defect repair. The following risk factors were associated
with increased mortality: age (P = 0.001), female gender (P = 0.001), serum
creatinine (P = 0.001), extracardiac arteriopathy (P = 0.001), chronic
airway disease (P = 0.006), severe neurological dysfunction (P = 0.001),
previous cardiac surgery (P = 0.001), recent myocardial infarction (P =
0.001), left ventricular ejection fraction (P = 0.001), chronic congestive
cardiac failure (P = 0.001), pulmonary hypertension (P = 0.001), active
endocarditis (P = 0.001), unstable angina (P = 0.001), procedure urgency (P
= 0.001), critical preoperative condition (P = 0.001) ventricular septal
rupture (P = 0.002), noncoronary surgery (P = 0.001), thoracic aortic
surgery (P = 0.001). CONCLUSION: A number of risk factors contribute to
cardiac surgical mortality in Europe. This information can be used to
develop a risk stratification system for the prediction of hospital
mortality and the assessment of quality of care.