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RI Hospital Cardiologist Heads Bariatric Surgery Study

Thursday, July 21, 2011

 

A new study by researchers from Rhode Island Hospital has found that a standard test utilized as a pre-op workup for weight reduction surgery may not be necessary.

The research on stress testing with myocardial perfusion imaging is published in the Journal of Nuclear Cardiology.

The impact: bariatric surgery and an obesity epidemic

Obesity is considered to be an epidemic in the United States, with more than two-thirds of the adult population overweight, and half of those adults are obese. Severe obesity is considered a chronic disease due to its potential to cause serious and potentially life-threatening health consequences. While the best approach to treatment of obesity is yet to be determined, bariatric surgery has been found to be safe and effective in reducing some of the complications associated with obesity.

The assumption: the need for stress testing

For bariatric surgery candidates, many are screened for cardiovascular disease prior to surgery because of the high prevalence of coronary artery disease (CAD) risk factors in this population, along with the presence of underlying functional limitations, which may make assessment of CAD symptoms difficult. A common tool used for this is stress testing with myocardial perfusion imaging (MPI).

But, according to the study, the incidence of "clinically significant abnormalities" that a stress MPI would identify had not been established.

RI research: questioning the assumption, important findings

In order to determine whether this test is needed and should be considered a necessary part of the bariatric surgery workup, James Arrighi, MD, a cardiologist with Rhode Island Hospital, led a study of 383 consecutive stress MPI studies performed on patients undergoing workup prior to planned bariatric surgery. The mean age of the population was 42, 83 percent female and a body mass index of 49 (+/- 8).

Arrighi and his team reported several important findings. First, 67 percent of patients underwent stress-only imaging, despite the fact that overweight patients are often difficult to image. Stress-only imaging significantly reduces the time required, radiation exposure, and cost associated with the test. Second, the study findings show that the incidence of abnormal MPI studies was low, and associated with a very low incidence of death or cardiac events at one-year follow-up, with less than 1 percent incidence of death from all causes or incidence of coronary revascularization, and there were no myocardial infarctions. Third, the perioperative cardiovascular events were extremely low, despite the high prevalence of risk factors for coronary artery disease.

"While stress testing in this patient population has been a relatively common practice with good cause, the findings of this study suggest that these tests may not be indicated in all patients," Arrighi said. "The results of our study suggest that this patient population is actually at very low risk for cardiovascular events, and if this is indeed the case, the routine preoperative stress testing with MPI for the detection of CAD may be unlikely to affect outcome. Additional studies are needed, however, to determine how higher-risk patients should be selected for pre-operative noninvasive risk stratification."

 

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