Clinical Tools to Assess Functional Capacity During Risk Assessment Before Elective Noncardiac Surgery : A Scoping Review.

IF 19.6 1区 医学 Q1 MEDICINE, GENERAL & INTERNAL
Julian F Daza, Tyler R Chesney, Juan F Morales, Yuanxin Xue, Sandra Lee, Leandra A Amado, Bianca Pivetta, Arnaud R Mbadjeu Hondjeu, Rachel Jolley, Calvin Diep, Shabbir M H Alibhai, Peter M Smith, Erin D Kennedy, Elizabeth Racz, Luke Wilmshurst, Duminda N Wijeysundera
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Background: Functional capacity is critical to preoperative risk assessment, yet guidance on its measurement in clinical practice remains lacking.

Purpose: To identify functional capacity assessment tools studied before surgery and characterize the extent of evidence regarding performance, including in populations where assessment is confounded by noncardiopulmonary reasons.

Data sources: MEDLINE, EMBASE, and EBM Reviews (until July 2024).

Study selection: Studies evaluating performance of functional capacity assessment tools administered before elective noncardiac surgery to stratify risk for postoperative outcomes.

Data extraction: Study details, measurement properties, pragmatic qualities, and/or clinical utility metrics.

Data synthesis: 6 categories of performance-based tests and 5 approaches using patient-reported exercise tolerance were identified. Cardiopulmonary exercise testing (CPET) was the most studied tool (132 studies, 32 662 patients) followed by field walking tests (58 studies, 9393 patients) among performance-based tests. Among patient-reported assessments, the Duke Activity Status Index (14 studies, 3303 patients) and unstructured assessments (19 studies, 28 520 patients) were most researched. Most evidence focused on predictive validity (92% of studies), specifically accuracy in predicting cardiorespiratory complications. Several tools lacked evidence on reliability (test consistency across similar measurements), pragmatic qualities (feasibility of implementation), or concurrent criterion validity (correlation to gold standard). Only CPET had evidence on clinical utility (whether administration improved postoperative outcomes). Older adults (≥65 years) were well represented across studies, whereas there were minimal data in patients with obesity, lower-limb arthritis, and disability.

Limitation: Synthesis focused on reported data without requesting missing information.

Conclusion: Though several tools for preoperative functional capacity assessment have been studied, research has overwhelmingly focused on CPET and only 1 aspect of validity (predictive validity). Important evidence gaps remain among vulnerable populations with obesity, arthritis, and physical disability.

Primary funding source: None. (Open Science Framework: https://osf.io/ah7u5).

在择期非心脏手术前进行风险评估时评估功能能力的临床工具:范围界定综述。
背景:目的:确定术前研究的功能能力评估工具,并描述有关性能的证据范围,包括评估受非心肺原因干扰的人群:研究选择:研究选择:评估在择期非心脏手术前使用功能能力评估工具对术后结果进行风险分层的性能的研究:研究细节、测量特性、实用性和/或临床效用指标。数据综合:确定了 6 类基于性能的测试和 5 种使用患者报告运动耐量的方法。在基于表现的测试中,心肺运动测试(CPET)是研究最多的工具(132 项研究,32 662 名患者),其次是野外步行测试(58 项研究,9393 名患者)。在患者报告的评估中,研究最多的是杜克活动状态指数(14 项研究,3303 名患者)和非结构化评估(19 项研究,28520 名患者)。大多数证据都集中在预测有效性方面(92% 的研究),特别是预测心肺并发症的准确性。一些工具缺乏可靠性(类似测量的测试一致性)、实用性(实施的可行性)或并发标准有效性(与金标准的相关性)方面的证据。只有 CPET 有临床实用性(实施后是否能改善术后效果)方面的证据。老年人(≥65 岁)在各项研究中的代表性较高,而肥胖症、下肢关节炎和残疾患者的数据则很少:局限性:综述侧重于报告数据,未要求提供缺失信息:尽管已对多种术前功能能力评估工具进行了研究,但绝大多数研究都集中在 CPET 上,而且只关注了有效性的一个方面(预测有效性)。在肥胖、关节炎和身体残疾的弱势群体中,仍存在重要的证据缺口:主要资金来源:无。(开放科学框架:https://osf.io/ah7u5)。
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来源期刊
Annals of Internal Medicine
Annals of Internal Medicine 医学-医学:内科
CiteScore
23.90
自引率
1.80%
发文量
1136
审稿时长
3-8 weeks
期刊介绍: Established in 1927 by the American College of Physicians (ACP), Annals of Internal Medicine is the premier internal medicine journal. Annals of Internal Medicine’s mission is to promote excellence in medicine, enable physicians and other health care professionals to be well informed members of the medical community and society, advance standards in the conduct and reporting of medical research, and contribute to improving the health of people worldwide. To achieve this mission, the journal publishes a wide variety of original research, review articles, practice guidelines, and commentary relevant to clinical practice, health care delivery, public health, health care policy, medical education, ethics, and research methodology. In addition, the journal publishes personal narratives that convey the feeling and the art of medicine.
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