Vetsch, Thomas; Eggmann, Sabrina; Jardot, François; von Gernler, Marc; Engel, Dominique; Beilstein, Christian M; Wüthrich, Patrick Y; Eser, Prisca; Wilhelm, Matthias (2024). Ventilatory efficiency as a prognostic factor for postoperative complications in patients undergoing elective major surgery: a systematic review. British journal of anaesthesia, 133(1), pp. 178-189. Elsevier 10.1016/j.bja.2024.03.013
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BACKGROUND
Major surgery is associated with high complication rates. Several risk scores exist to assess individual patient risk before surgery but have limited precision. Novel prognostic factors can be included as additional building blocks in existing prediction models. A candidate prognostic factor, measured by cardiopulmonary exercise testing, is ventilatory efficiency (VE/VCO2). The aim of this systematic review was to summarise evidence regarding VE/VCO2 as a prognostic factor for postoperative complications in patients undergoing major surgery.
METHODS
A medical library specialist developed the search strategy. No database-provided limits, considering study types, languages, publication years, or any other formal criteria were applied to any of the sources. Two reviewers assessed eligibility of each record and rated risk of bias in included studies.
RESULTS
From 10,082 screened records, 65 studies were identified as eligible. We extracted adjusted associations from 32 studies and unadjusted from 33 studies. Risk of bias was a concern in the domains 'study confounding' and 'statistical analysis'. VE/VCO2 was reported as a prognostic factor for short-term complications after thoracic and abdominal surgery. VE/VCO2 was also reported as a prognostic factor for mid- to long-term mortality. Data-driven covariable selection was applied in 31 studies. Eighteen studies excluded VE/VCO2 from the final multivariable regression owing to data-driven model-building approaches.
CONCLUSIONS
This systematic review identifies VE/VCO2 as a predictor for short-term complications after thoracic and abdominal surgery. However, the available data do not allow conclusions about clinical decision-making. Future studies should select covariables for adjustment a priori based on external knowledge.
SYSTEMATIC REVIEW PROTOCOL
PROSPERO (CRD42022369944).