Residents’ knowledge of ACC/AHA guidelines for preoperative cardiac evaluation is limited

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BobbieJean Sweitzer, MD
University of Chicago, IL

Michael Vigoda, MD, MBA
University of Miami Miller School of Medicine, Miami, FL

Nikola Milokjic
University of Nebraska, Omaha, NE

Ben Boedeker, DVM, MD, PhD, MBA
University of Nebraska, Omaha, NE

Kip D. Robinson, MD, FACP
University of Tennessee Medical Center, Knoxville, TN

Michael A. Pilla, MD
Vanderbilt University Medical Center, Nashville, TN

Robert Gaiser, MD
University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, PA

Angela F. Edwards, MD
Wake Forest University Baptist Medical Center, Winston-Salem, NC

Ronald P. Olson, MD
Duke University Medical Center, Durham, NC

Matthew D. Caldwell, MD
University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, MI

Shawn T. Beaman, MD
University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine, Pittsburgh, PA

Jeffrey A. Green, MD
Virginia Commonwealth University Medical Center, Richmond, VA

Jesse M. Ehrenfeld, MD, MPH
Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston, MA

Marsha L. Wakefield, MD
University of Alabama at Birmingham, AL

Praveen Kalra, MD
University of Oklahoma Health Sciences Center, Oklahoma City, OK

David M. Feinstein, MD
Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center, Boston, MA

Deborah C. Richman, MBChB, FFA(SA)
SUNY, Stony Brook, NY

Gail Van Norman
University of Washington, Seattle, WA

Gary E. Loyd, MD, MMM
University of Louisville, KY

Paul W. Kranner, MD
University of Wisconsin School of Medicine and Public Health, Madison, WI

Stevin Dubin, MD
Medical College of Georgia, Augusta, GA

Sunil Eappen, MD
Massachusetts Eye and Ear Infirmary, Boston, MA

Sergio D. Bergese, MD
Ohio State University, Columbus, OH

Suzanne Karan, MD
University of Rochester School of Medicine and Dentistry, Rochester, NY

James R. Rowbottom, MD, FCCP
University Hospitals Case Medical Center, Cleveland, OH

Keith Candiotti, MD
University of Miami Miller School of Medicine, Miami, FL

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BobbieJean Sweitzer, MD
University of Chicago, IL

Michael Vigoda, MD, MBA
University of Miami Miller School of Medicine, Miami, FL

Nikola Milokjic
University of Nebraska, Omaha, NE

Ben Boedeker, DVM, MD, PhD, MBA
University of Nebraska, Omaha, NE

Kip D. Robinson, MD, FACP
University of Tennessee Medical Center, Knoxville, TN

Michael A. Pilla, MD
Vanderbilt University Medical Center, Nashville, TN

Robert Gaiser, MD
University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, PA

Angela F. Edwards, MD
Wake Forest University Baptist Medical Center, Winston-Salem, NC

Ronald P. Olson, MD
Duke University Medical Center, Durham, NC

Matthew D. Caldwell, MD
University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, MI

Shawn T. Beaman, MD
University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine, Pittsburgh, PA

Jeffrey A. Green, MD
Virginia Commonwealth University Medical Center, Richmond, VA

Jesse M. Ehrenfeld, MD, MPH
Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston, MA

Marsha L. Wakefield, MD
University of Alabama at Birmingham, AL

Praveen Kalra, MD
University of Oklahoma Health Sciences Center, Oklahoma City, OK

David M. Feinstein, MD
Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center, Boston, MA

Deborah C. Richman, MBChB, FFA(SA)
SUNY, Stony Brook, NY

Gail Van Norman
University of Washington, Seattle, WA

Gary E. Loyd, MD, MMM
University of Louisville, KY

Paul W. Kranner, MD
University of Wisconsin School of Medicine and Public Health, Madison, WI

Stevin Dubin, MD
Medical College of Georgia, Augusta, GA

Sunil Eappen, MD
Massachusetts Eye and Ear Infirmary, Boston, MA

Sergio D. Bergese, MD
Ohio State University, Columbus, OH

Suzanne Karan, MD
University of Rochester School of Medicine and Dentistry, Rochester, NY

James R. Rowbottom, MD, FCCP
University Hospitals Case Medical Center, Cleveland, OH

Keith Candiotti, MD
University of Miami Miller School of Medicine, Miami, FL

Author and Disclosure Information

BobbieJean Sweitzer, MD
University of Chicago, IL

Michael Vigoda, MD, MBA
University of Miami Miller School of Medicine, Miami, FL

Nikola Milokjic
University of Nebraska, Omaha, NE

Ben Boedeker, DVM, MD, PhD, MBA
University of Nebraska, Omaha, NE

Kip D. Robinson, MD, FACP
University of Tennessee Medical Center, Knoxville, TN

Michael A. Pilla, MD
Vanderbilt University Medical Center, Nashville, TN

Robert Gaiser, MD
University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, PA

Angela F. Edwards, MD
Wake Forest University Baptist Medical Center, Winston-Salem, NC

Ronald P. Olson, MD
Duke University Medical Center, Durham, NC

Matthew D. Caldwell, MD
University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, MI

Shawn T. Beaman, MD
University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine, Pittsburgh, PA

Jeffrey A. Green, MD
Virginia Commonwealth University Medical Center, Richmond, VA

Jesse M. Ehrenfeld, MD, MPH
Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston, MA

Marsha L. Wakefield, MD
University of Alabama at Birmingham, AL

Praveen Kalra, MD
University of Oklahoma Health Sciences Center, Oklahoma City, OK

David M. Feinstein, MD
Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center, Boston, MA

Deborah C. Richman, MBChB, FFA(SA)
SUNY, Stony Brook, NY

Gail Van Norman
University of Washington, Seattle, WA

Gary E. Loyd, MD, MMM
University of Louisville, KY

Paul W. Kranner, MD
University of Wisconsin School of Medicine and Public Health, Madison, WI

Stevin Dubin, MD
Medical College of Georgia, Augusta, GA

Sunil Eappen, MD
Massachusetts Eye and Ear Infirmary, Boston, MA

Sergio D. Bergese, MD
Ohio State University, Columbus, OH

Suzanne Karan, MD
University of Rochester School of Medicine and Dentistry, Rochester, NY

James R. Rowbottom, MD, FCCP
University Hospitals Case Medical Center, Cleveland, OH

Keith Candiotti, MD
University of Miami Miller School of Medicine, Miami, FL

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Case studies in perioperative management: Challenges, controversies, and common ground

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Case studies in perioperative management: Challenges, controversies, and common ground

CASE 1: RADICAL PROSTATECTOMY IN A MAN WITH ACUTE DEEP VEIN THROMBOSIS

A 69-year-old man is seen in the preoperative clinic 1 week before a scheduled radical prostatectomy. He has been diagnosed with femoral deep vein thrombosis (DVT) following a complaint of calf soreness.

Question 1.1: How would you treat him for his DVT?

A. Intravenous (IV) unfractionated heparin (UFH)

B. Low-molecular-weight heparin (LMWH)

C. Inferior vena cava (IVC) filter

D. Combination of pharmacologic therapy and then an IVC filter

Dr. Steven L. Cohn: The latest edition of the American College of Chest Physicians (ACCP) evidence-based guidelines on antithrombotic therapy recommends the use of therapeutic-dose subcutaneous LMWH over IV UFH for initial treatment of acute DVT in the outpatient or inpatient setting.1 Additionally, indications for an IVC filter include the prevention of pulmonary embolism (PE) in a patient with DVT who requires full-dose anticoagulation but cannot receive it, as would be the case here if the patient proceeds with surgery as scheduled. So if surgery will be postponed, the best option is LMWH; if surgery will not be postponed, the best answer is a combination of pharmacologic therapy with low-dose LMWH and an IVC filter, preferably a retrievable one.2

Question 1.2: You recommend postponing surgery, but the patient is worried about metastatic disease. For how long should surgery be postponed?

A. 2 weeks

B. 1 month

C. 2 months

D. 3 months

E. 6 months

Dr. Cohn: In the absence of anticoagulation therapy, the risk of venous thromboembolism (VTE) is approximately 40% (~1% per day) during the first month following an acute VTE and then declines markedly, to approximately 10%, during the second and third months following the acute event.3 Therefore, I would suggest that the patient wait at least 1 month after an acute DVT before undergoing surgery.

Dr. BobbieJean Sweitzer: This patient is in a hypercoagulable state, and the surgery itself will induce excess hypercoagulability. With a femoral DVT already present, his risk of VTE or PE is likely to be greater than 1% per day during the first month. If he does develop a PE, it may potentially be fatal.

Question 1.3: According to the patient, the surgeon and the internist discussed options, but the surgeon “doesn’t believe in filters” and the patient doesn’t want to postpone the procedure, despite your recommendation. Two weeks later he shows up for surgery having stopped his LMWH 3 days before. What would you do?

A. Cancel the surgery and restart full-dose LMWH

B. Proceed with prophylactic-dose LMWH

C. Proceed after giving a full therapeutic dose

D. Insert a filter and give DVT prophylaxis

Dr. Cohn: A bridging protocol should have been discussed with the surgeon and anesthesiologist before the procedure. Therapeutic levels of LMWH persist as long as 18 hours after discontinuation; therefore, the ACCP recommends interrupting LMWH 24 hours before surgery.4

Dr. Sweitzer: The lack of a bridging protocol in this case created a problem. The patient was afraid to continue anticoagulation after hearing the internist and surgeon disagree about the plan, and thus stopped it entirely, and he did not want to delay surgery because he was fearful of metastasis. The surgeon was adamant that IVC filters don’t work. The internist was concerned that the patient was at high risk for a PE. Even though the documented risk of postponing radical prostatectomy for a short time is inconsequential, I was convinced that the patient would not believe this if metastasis were to develop in the future.

Question 1.4: How would you have managed his anticoagulation perioperatively?

A. Stop LMWH 12 hours before surgery and restart at full dose 12 to 24 hours after surgery

B. Stop LMWH 24 hours before surgery and restart at full dose 24 hours after surgery

C. Stop LMWH 24 hours before surgery and restart prophylactic dosing 12 to 24 hours after surgery, and then full-dose LMWH in 48 to 72 hours

D. Stop LMWH 24 hours before surgery and restart at full dose 72 hours after surgery

Dr. Cohn: The correct timing for stopping LMWH is 24 hours before surgery. As for how to resume anticoagulation in patients at high risk for VTE or those undergoing major surgery, the latest ACCP guidelines recommend the following4:

  • Reinitiation of anticoagulation 12 to 24 hours postoperatively, assuming adequate hemostasis in patients not at high risk for bleeding
  • Use of a prophylactic dose or no anticoagulation for up to 72 hours if the patient is at high risk for bleeding.

These recommendations are a departure from previous practice, in which we routinely restarted anticoagulation 6 to 12 hours postoperatively.

Dr. Sweitzer: According to guidelines from the American Society of Regional Anesthesia and Pain Medicine (ASRA),5 if twice-daily LMWH is stopped 24 hours ahead of time (as long as patients have normal renal function), it is safe to perform epidural or spinal anesthesia, if either is an option. If full-dose UFH is used, the partial thrombo­plastin time (PTT) is monitored and central neuraxial blockade may be done if the PTT is in the normal range, which typically is 2 to 6 hours after UFH is stopped.

Additionally, the platelet count should be checked every 3 days postoperatively while the patient is on UFH or LMWH. It may be just as important to monitor the platelet count preoperatively if the patient has been on UFH or LMWH for an extended duration, especially if a central neuraxial anesthetic technique is planned.

Dr. Cohn: The reason for monitoring the platelet count is the potential for heparin-induced thrombocytopenia in patients on UFH. I recently encountered a patient who developed postoperative heparin-induced thrombo­cytopenia with thrombosis while on LMWH, which is relatively uncommon compared with UFH.

Case resolution

After much discussion of the risk of a significant PE with the patient, family, urologist, and vascular surgeon, it is decided that a temporary IVC filter will be placed in the operating room immediately after induction of general anesthesia and before the prostatectomy. The operation is delayed about 1 hour to allow this option. The patient is successfully treated and has the IVC filter removed 1 month postoperatively.

 

 

CASE 2: RADICAL CYSTECTOMY IN ELDERLY MAN WITH CARDIAC RISK FACTORS

A 78-year-old obese Russian-speaking man is seen in the preoperative clinic prior to a scheduled radical cystectomy for highly invasive bladder cancer. He is a poor historian and argues with the several family members accompanying him, but it is determined that his medical history includes hypertension, diabetes mellitus, a myocardial infarction (MI) 5 years previously (in Russia), and stable angina that is determined to be class II.

He had no previous work-up and no electrocardiogram (ECG). His medications are aspirin, metoprolol, and metformin. His blood pressure is 190/100 mm Hg, heart rate 90 beats per minute, and body mass index 32. On examination, there is no murmur, S3 gallop, or rales. His blood glucose is 220 mg/dL, and his creatinine is slightly elevated (1.4 mg/dL). ECG verifies a prior MI.

Question 2.1: Which of the following additional tests should be ordered preoperatively?

A. Hemoglobin (Hb) A1c

B. Lipid profile

C. Both

D. Neither

Dr. Sweitzer: Because the surgery is not elective, no immediate benefit would be achieved by ordering either an HbA1c or a lipid profile. However, if you view the preoperative evaluation as an opportunity to manage risk factors over the long term, then it may be a good idea to order the lipid profile because this patient has rarely engaged the health care system. Likewise, the HbA1c can be ordered to set in place his long-term management. Sometimes we focus on the preoperative visit only in the context of the surgery, but if a test or intervention is appropriate and needed for long-term management, then it is appropriate to do now.

Dr. Cohn: There is no evidence to support using the preoperative HbA1c to alter management decisions. I would not postpone surgery based on the HbA1c value, as I would if his glucose level were 600 mg/dL. Most of the studies that have assessed postoperative complications based on preoperative HbA1c did not control for postoperative glucose levels. The incidence of complications varies based on the type of complication and the type of surgery.

Similarly, I would not use lipid values to guide management of this patient. Studies suggest that perioperative statin therapy may reduce postoperative morbidity and mortality in patients undergoing vascular surgery (see article by Poldermans on page S79 of this supplement), but our patient already has indications for a statin—a remote MI and diabetes—independent of what his lipid values are.

Question 2.2: How would you manage his elevated blood pressure (190/100 mm Hg)?

A. Discontinue metoprolol and start a different antihypertensive drug

B. Increase the metoprolol dose

C. Continue metoprolol and add a second drug

D. Observe him on his current regimen

Dr. Cohn: I would increase the dose of metoprolol and consider adding another drug, in view of his heart rate (90 beats per minute) and his cardiac status. Beta-blocker therapy should not be discontinued because doing so in the perioperative period is associated with an increased risk of adverse events such as cardiac death and MI.

Dr. Sweitzer: I would push up the metoprolol a bit to reduce the heart rate, knowing that beta-blockers are probably not the most efficacious antihypertensive agents. I would caution against starting an angiotensin-converting enzyme (ACE) inhibitor or an angiotensin receptor blocker (ARB) because he is scheduled to undergo a fairly significant procedure with expected blood loss and fluid shifts, and either of those agents in combination with a beta-blocker would be challenging to manage on the day of surgery.

Question 2.3: How would you manage his metformin perioperatively?

A. Discontinue it 48 hours preoperatively

B. Discontinue it 24 hours preoperatively

C. Withhold it on the morning of surgery

D. Continue it on the morning of surgery

Dr. Sweitzer: We routinely advise patients to hold all their oral diabetes medications the morning of surgery, primarily because many anesthesiologists are uncertain about the differing risks of hypoglycemia associated with the various oral agents.

Most of us will never see a patient who has lactic acidosis from metformin use. A systematic literature review and analysis found no increase in the risk of lactic acidosis with metformin compared with other oral hypoglycemics,6 so fear of lactic acidosis is not a valid reason to discontinue metformin. In fact, I think it is inappropriate to ever postpone or cancel surgery simply because the patient inadvertently took metformin on the morning of surgery. Some may argue that patients with renal insufficiency are at higher risk of lactic acidosis from metformin use on the morning of surgery, but keep in mind that renal insufficiency is a relative contra­indication to metformin use in the first place. Unless the patient is scheduled for a bilateral nephrectomy, his or her renal function is not going to be acutely reduced enough to enable a morning dose of metformin to cause lactic acidosis.

Dr. Cohn: Additionally, in a recent study of patients undergoing coronary artery bypass graft surgery (CABG), there was no increased risk of in-hospital morbidity or mortality in patients who received metformin on the morning of surgery,7 although I typically stop it 24 hours before major surgery.

Question 2.4: With respect to statin therapy, which course would you choose preoperatively?

A. Start a statin at a low dose

B. Start a statin at an intermediate dose

C. Start a statin at a high dose

D. Do not start a statin

Dr. Cohn: The answer to this question is not clear cut. The reason not to start a prophylactic statin would be the lack of evidence of benefit in patients undergoing noncardiac, nonvascular surgery, although there is evidence of potential benefit in patients undergoing vascular surgery.* The arguments in favor of starting a statin are that this patient has independent indications for a statin and the planned surgery is a high-risk procedure.

(* Editor’s note: In the time since this summit, results of the DECREASE-IV trial were published [Dunkelgrun et al, Ann Surg 2009; 249:921–926], showing a statisically nonsignificant trend toward improved outcomes at 30 days with fluvastatin in intermediate-risk patients undergoing noncardiovascular surgery.)

In cohort studies, perioperative death rates have been lower in statin recipients than in those not taking a statin.8 In the Dutch Echographic Cardiac Risk Evaluation Applying Stress Echo III (DECREASE III), which randomized noncardiac vascular surgery patients to perioperative fluvastatin or placebo, rates of MI and the composite end point of nonfatal MI or cardiovascular death were significantly lower in the statin group than in the placebo group.9

Question 2.5: Which of the following cardiac tests would you order preoperatively?

A. Exercise ECG

B. Dobutamine stress echocardiogram

C. Dipyridamole nuclear imaging

D. Coronary angiography

E. No further cardiac testing

Dr. Cohn: I wouldn’t do any cardiac testing since this patient needs surgery for his malignancy and the results of any testing would be highly unlikely to change management, in terms of canceling the surgery. This approach is consistent with the 2007 guidelines on perioperative cardiovascular evaluation for noncardiac surgery issued by the American College of Cardiology (ACC) and the American Heart Association (AHA).10

Dr. Sweitzer: I would differ on this question. This patient has not been evaluated adequately for his coronary artery disease. He has poor functional capacity that complicates assessment of his symptoms. He also has diabetes, so he is more likely to have silent myocardial ischemia. At age 78, he is understandably concerned about his survival: radical cystectomy is a major operation associated with significant blood loss, fluid shifts, and a long-term recuperative state. In this case, a cardiac evaluation may change management, not in terms of considering coronary revascularization before the surgery, but in terms of affecting the assessment of his chance of surviving this major operation, his life span following the operation, and his quality of life. For example, a highly positive dobutamine stress echo­cardiogram or certain wall motion abnormalities would suggest that he might not be protected even by optimal perioperative medical management.

Question 2.6: Which of the following would you do pre­operatively to assess pulmonary risk?

A. Obtain pulmonary function tests

B. Order a sleep study

C. Both

D. Neither

Dr. Sweitzer: There is no evidence supporting routine pulmonary function tests for patients undergoing procedures other than lung resection. If obstructive sleep apnea were suspected, I would order a sleep study only if I had access to one quickly to avoid delaying the surgery. Cancer surgery should never be delayed to get a sleep study. However, if this patient were seen in the primary care clinic, I would order a sleep study and, if indicated, put him on continuous positive airway pressure (CPAP). Whether or not preoperative CPAP makes a difference hasn’t been shown. No randomized controlled trials have been conducted, but there are some suggestions that the risks of ischemia and atrial arrhythmias in patients with known coronary artery disease can be reduced with CPAP. It is not always easy to initiate CPAP postoperatively because the number of CPAP machines is limited and titration by a respiratory technician is required, which is typically done in a sleep lab.

How the case was actually managed

Neither an HbA1c measurement nor a lipid profile was ordered preoperatively, for lack of supportive evidence. The patient was continued on his beta-blocker and the dosage was increased sufficiently to control his blood pressure and heart rate. Metformin was continued, and statin therapy was begun preoperatively in light of the patient’s independent indications for it and the high-risk nature of the procedure. Stress testing was not ordered, in light of the lack of indication, given the patient’s stable angina. The patient refused a sleep study. The operation was lengthy and involved significant blood loss. The patient had a complicated postoperative course and ultimately died from multiorgan failure.

 

 

CASE 3: OPERATIONS OF VARIABLE RISK IN ELDERLY MAN WITH ACTIVE CARDIAC CONDITION

Scenario A: A 75-year-old man with diabetes, class III angina, and Q waves in inferior leads on his ECG is scheduled for elective femoropopliteal bypass surgery. His medications include isosorbide mononitrate (120 mg), amlodipine (10 mg), metoprolol controlled release (100 mg), atorvastatin (80 mg), insulin, and aspirin (81 mg). His heart rate is 64 beats per minute, blood pressure is controlled at 120/80 mm Hg, low-density lipoprotein cholesterol is 80 mg/dL, and creatinine is 1.5 μmol/L.

Scenario B: Consider the same patient undergoing elective cholecystectomy instead of a femoropopliteal bypass.

Scenario C: Consider the same patient scheduled for a cystoscopy instead of the other procedures. He had one episode of gross hematuria 1 week ago that resolved. Work-up by his urologist included a urinalysis and culture that were normal, cytology that was negative for malignancy, and a sonogram and computed tomography scan that were both negative. He has had no further bleeding and is not anemic. The urologist wants to do the cystoscopy for the sake of completeness.

Question 3.1: What would be your preoperative course of action in the above scenarios?

A. Order a dobutamine stress echocardiogram

B. Order nuclear imaging with dipyridamole or adenosine

C. Order coronary angiography

D. Order a resting two-dimensional echocardiogram

E. Continue his current medications and send to surgery with no further testing

Dr. Cohn: This is a man with an active cardiac condition and class III angina, which is considered severe angina in the ACC/AHA 2007 guidelines on peri­operative cardiac evaluation and care.10 The guidelines’ recommendation is to delay surgery for further evaluation and treatment. He is already on maximal medical therapy, which has failed to control his symptoms. He has poor exercise capacity. The only difference among the case scenarios is a variation in surgical risk.

This patient has independent indications for coronary angiography regardless of whether or not he’s undergoing surgery. He deserves evaluation for possible revascularization to improve his quality of life and symptoms.

I would send the patient to the catheterization lab in every one of these instances, with the possible exception of the cystoscopy scenario, where one could argue that revascularization with stenting would require antiplatelet therapy that might increase the bleeding risk, and also that the antiplatelet therapy would have to be interrupted for the cystoscopy, potentially increasing thrombotic risk.

Dr. Sweitzer: I disagree. The ACC/AHA 2007 guidelines do not recommend going directly to catheterization but rather recommend delaying surgery for further evaluation and treatment.10 We must ask whether this patient is truly receiving optimal medical management. After all, he is not on an ACE inhibitor or an ARB.

We must also consider whether the surgery is truly elective. In the first scenario, if he has peripheral vascular disease, he is likely to develop gangrene and have a further decrease in exercise capacity, which reduces his functional ability and increases his risk of comorbid conditions. He is at significant risk of developing worsening renal insufficiency or renal failure if he undergoes angiography. Coronary revascularization will delay treatment of his peripheral vascular disease. The Coronary Artery Revascularization Prophylaxis (CARP) trial showed no benefit of coronary revascularization relative to medical management in patients undergoing vascular surgery,11 as is planned for this patient. I believe one must balance two competing risks and have an in-depth discussion with the patient.

In the second scenario, not treating gallstones or preventing cholelithiasis poses more risk to the health of this diabetic patient than does elective surgery if he needs a cholecystectomy. Emergency surgery, especially for acute cholecystitis, also significantly increases the risk of a cardiac event.

In the third scenario, the cystoscopy may uncover bladder cancer, which may be adversely affected by a delay of surgery. Regardless, the patient had gross hematuria and would be at risk for further bleeding should he undergo stenting with the requisite antiplatelet therapy.

Catheterization is not normally recommended unless CABG or stenting is being considered, yet I have seen no data that either of these procedures prolongs life except in very limited circumstances such as left main disease treated with bypass grafting. Though it is true that CABG reduces the incidence and severity of angina, it does not modify the physiologic cause of angina but rather may result in symptom improvement by damaging somatic nerve fibers to the heart. Putting a stent in this patient would be like applying a bandage: his symptoms will likely recur if he does not receive optimal medical management.

In a 2007 science advisory, several major medical societies cautioned against percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI) with drug-eluting stent placement in patients expected to undergo noncardiac surgery that would require interruption of antiplatelet therapy in the following 12 months (and against PCI with bare metal stent placement in patients undergoing such surgery in the following 4 to 6 weeks).12 Therefore, I would not recommend catheterization for a patient whose noncardiac disease is likely to require surgery in the very near future, as is the case in each of the surgical scenarios above. One could consider noninvasive stress testing, which would be a safer approach and would almost certainly identify either significant stenosis of the left main coronary artery or three-vessel disease, which would be the only possible reasons to recommend CABG. I don’t believe there is any role for PCI for this patient.

Dr. Cohn: I argue for symptom relief even if it doesn’t prolong life. This patient cannot walk across the room without having symptoms despite taking multiple medications. I think he deserves a chance at revascularization if the angiogram shows he has a stenosis amenable to it, but I agree that a drug-eluting stent should not be placed if we know that he will undergo surgery within a few months.

 

 

CASE 4: VENTRAL HERNIA REPAIR IN A MIDDLE-AGED WOMAN

A 60-year-old woman is scheduled for ventral hernia repair. Her medical history is unremarkable, with the exception of hypertension. She denies any bleeding problems and had no complications after a laparoscopic cholecystectomy 10 years ago. She has no family history of bleeding disorders.

Question 4.1: Would you order a prothrombin time (PT)/partial thromboplastin time (PTT)?

A. Yes

B. No

Dr. Cohn: I would not.

Dr. Sweitzer: I agree.

Question 4.2: Although not requested, a PT/PTT was ordered anyway. The PT is normal (12.2 sec/12 sec) and the PTT is abnormal (40 sec/25 sec). What is the most likely cause of the PTT abnormality?

A. Laboratory error

B. Factor VII deficiency

C. Factor IX deficiency

D. Factor XI deficiency

E. Factor XII deficiency

Dr. Cohn: The most likely cause is a sample with insufficient blood in the tube. The test wasn’t indicated in the first place, but now it must be done again.

Question 4.3: The PTT is repeated and remains abnormal: 42 sec/25 sec. Mixing studies correct the abnormality to 29 sec/25 sec. Based on this information, what is the most likely cause of the PTT abnormality?

A. Laboratory error

B. Lupus anticoagulant

C. Prekallikrein factor deficiency

D. Factor XII deficiency

Dr. Cohn: This is not a case of lupus anticoagulant because the abnormal PTT was corrected by the mixing study. Causes of a prolonged PTT include deficiencies of factors XII, XI, and IX, so factor XII deficiency is the most likely explanation, though a deficiency higher up the coagulation cascade (ie, prekallikrein factor deficiency) is possible. In the absence of any personal or family bleeding history, it is unlikely to be a deficiency of factors VII or IX (the hemophiliac) or of factor XI, so a deficiency of factor XII or one of the prekallikrein factors is more likely.

Dr. Sweitzer: A mixing study is indeed the appropriate first step. It is ordered from the lab and involves mixing the patient’s blood with normal plasma and incubating the mixture. If the mixture corrects the PTT result, as was the case with this patient, it indicates a coagulation factor deficiency in the patient’s blood; if it doesn’t correct, that should prompt evaluation for lupus anticoagulant or the presence of some other protein or hormone that’s prolonging the PTT.

Question 4.4: How would you manage this patient perioperatively?

A. Fresh frozen plasma

B. Platelet transfusion

C. Cryoprecipitate

D. Factor VII

E. No treatment necessary

Dr. Cohn: No treatment is necessary. Factor XII deficiency does not cause bleeding, regardless of the PTT. Factor XI deficiency is associated with bleeding, but usually there is a family history or a personal history of bleeding with surgery.

Screening coagulation studies are not usually indicated in a patient without a personal or family history of bleeding, liver disease, alcohol or drug use, or current anticoagulant therapy. Such studies are usually normal in such patients, and when they are not, it’s usually because of a lab error or a disease (hypercoagulable state) or factor deficiency that does not cause bleeding

Dr. Sweitzer: However, if the PTT is prolonged, the cause should be identified, because if the patient is sent to the operating room without an explanation for the prolongation, the perioperative team might think the patient has a bleeding problem and use fresh frozen plasma too readily. Fresh frozen plasma is not appropriate for everyone and may actually make a potentially hypercoagulable state worse.

 

 

DISCUSSION

Question from the audience: It was said that use of ACE inhibitors and ARBs should be avoided around the time of surgery. I’ve done an extensive literature search and found minimal to no evidence to support this practice. To the contrary, I found fairly good evidence to indicate that heart failure can be exacerbated significantly and acutely, as early as within 24 hours, when patients are taken off their ACE inhibitor or ARB. I would like your viewpoint on this basic pathology in perioperative medicine.

Dr. Cohn: The literature on the use of ACE inhibitors or ARBs prior to noncardiac surgery consists of five studies with fewer than 500 patients in total, as recently reviewed by Rosenman et al.13 Although there was no excess of death or MI associated with taking these medications on the morning of surgery, they did increase the need for fluid and pressors.

Dr. Sweitzer: Patients with hypertension have bigger variations of blood pressure, both hypo- and hypertension, in the perioperative period. For this reason, it was standard of care 30 years ago to stop all antihypertensive drugs, including beta-blockers, preoperatively. We soon found that although this practice prevented many episodes of hypotension, it increased the occurrence of perioperative hypertension and the likelihood of cardiac events. It then became standard of care to always continue antihypertensive drugs on the morning of surgery. In the late 1980s and early 1990s, several studies showed that ACE inhibitors and ARBs were associated with a more profound drop in blood pressure upon induction of general anesthesia compared with other antihypertensives.

The usual ways we treat drops in blood pressure—with phenylephrine and ephedrine—are not very effective in treating hypotension associated with general anesthesia in patients taking ACE inhibitors or ARBs. Vasopressin is effective in treating refractory hypotension during surgery, but anesthesiologists don’t use it often. Reducing the doses of induction agents is another means of attenuating the hypotension induced by ACE inhibitors and ARBs.

We should not routinely stop ACE inhibitors and ARBs on the day of surgery, particularly in patients being treated for heart failure, angina, or a prior MI. My bias is to selectively hold ACE inhibitors and ARBs on the morning of surgery in patients who are undergoing a significant operation with a high likelihood of hypotension, have well-controlled preoperative blood pressure, are taking multiple antihypertensive agents, and do not have heart failure. Otherwise, patients should continue their ACE inhibitors and ARBs on the morning of surgery, and the anesthesiologist should be prepared for significant hypotension upon induction of anesthesia, alter anesthesia induction doses accordingly, have vasopressin handy, and avoid the temptation to treat hypotension with fluids or repeated doses of phenylephrine and ephedrine. The previous comment about concerns with ACE inhibitors and ARBs was in the context of initiating new therapies in the immediate preoperative period.

Question from the audience: Urinalysis is ordered for many patients undergoing orthopedic surgery, and invariably some bacteriuria is found. Can you comment on the value of urinalysis and subsequent treatment of abnormal results?

Dr. Cohn: I believe you should never order a urinalysis in an asymptomatic patient, with the exception of patients undergoing procedures that involve genitourinary or gynecologic instrumentation. Ordering a urinalysis before joint replacement has been promoted in the orthopedic literature on the theoretical grounds that bacteria might somehow seed and colonize the joint. Orthopedic surgeons like to do it, but I disregard their requests for it.

Dr. Sweitzer: One study showed that we’d need to spend $1.5 million on screening urinalysis for asymptomatic patients scheduled for joint replacement surgery in order to prevent one joint infection.14

Dr. Cohn: Also, patients are going to get their one dose of cephalosporin before surgery anyway, and that will probably knock out any bacteria that would be found on urinalysis.

Question from the audience: Can you clarify how the 2007 ACC/AHA perioperative guidelines define an active cardiac condition? The patient in your third case report had class III angina, or angina with less than usual activities, but nothing was presented to suggest that his symptoms were unstable. I would suggest that despite his class III symptoms, his angina was stable, and I would have continued down the algorithm rather than defining his cardiac condition as active and considering an intervention.

Dr. Cohn: An active cardiac condition is defined by the ACC as unstable coronary syndromes, which include acute (within the prior 7 days) or recent (within the prior 30 days) MI, unstable angina, and severe (class III or IV) angina.

References
  1. Kearon C, Kahn SR, Agnelli G, Goldhaber S, Raskob GE, Comerota AJ. Antithrombotic therapy for venous thromboembolic disease. American College of Chest Physicians Evidence-Based Clinical Practice Guidelines (8th edition). Chest 2008; 133(6 suppl):454S–545S.
  2. Geerts WH, Bergqvist D, Pineo GF, et al. Prevention of venous thromboembolism: American College of Chest Physicians Evidence-Based Clinical Practice Guidelines (8th edition). Chest 2008; 133(6 suppl):381S–453S.
  3. Kearon C, Hirsh J. Management of anticoagulation before and after elective surgery. N Engl J Med 1997; 336:1506–1511.
  4. Douketis JD, Berger PB, Dunn AS, et al. The perioperative management of antithrombotic therapy: American College of Chest Physicians Evidence-Based Clinical Practice Guidelines (8th edition). Chest 2008; 133(6 suppl):299S–339S.
  5. Horlocker TT, Wedel DJ, Benzon H, et al. Regional anesthesia in the anticoagulated patient: defining the risks (the second ASRA Consensus Conference on Neuraxial Anesthesia and Anticoagulation). Regional Anesthesia & Pain Medicine. 2003; 28:172–197. Available at: http://www.asra.com/consensus-statements/2.html. Accessed May 11, 2009.
  6. Salpeter S, Gryeber E, Pasternak G, Salpeter E. Risk of fatal and nonfatal lactic acidosis with metformin use in type 2 diabetes mellitus. Cochrane Syst Rev 2006; (1):CD002967.
  7. Duncan AI, Koch CG, Xu M, et al.  Recent metformin ingestion does not increase in-hospital morbidity or mortality after cardiac surgery. Anesth Analg 2007; 104:42–50.
  8. Kapoor AS, Kanji H, Buckingham J, Devereaux PJ, McAlister FA. Strength of evidence for perioperative use of statins to reduce cardiovascular risk: systematic review of controlled studies. BMJ 2006; 333:1149.
  9. Poldermans D. Fluvastatin XL use is associated with improved cardiac outcome after major vascular surgery: results from a randomized placebo controlled trial. Presented at: European Society of Cardiology Congress 2008; September 1, 2008; Munich, Germany.
  10. Fleisher LA, Beckman JA, Brown KA, et al. ACC/AHA 2007 guidelines on perioperative cardiovascular evaluation and care for noncardiac surgery. J Am Coll Cardiol 2007; 50:e159–e242.
  11. McFalls EO, Ward HB, Moritz TE, et al. Coronary-artery revascularization before elective major vascular surgery. N Engl J Med 2004; 351:2795–2804.
  12. Grines CL, Bonow RO, Casey DE Jr, et al. Prevention of premature discontinuation of dual antiplatelet therapy in patients with coronary artery stents: a science advisory from the American Heart Association, American College of Cardiology, Society for Cardiovascular Angiography and Interventions, American College of Surgeons, and American Dental Association, with representation from the American College of Physicians. Circulation 2007; 115:813–818.
  13. Rosenman DJ, McDonald FS, Ebbert JO, Erwin PJ, LaBella M, Montori VM. Clinical consequences of withholding versus administering renin-agiotensin-aldosterone system antagonists in the preoperative period. J Hosp Med 2008; 3:319–325.
  14. Lawrence VA, Gafni A, Gross M. The unproven utility of the preoperative urinalysis: economic evaluation. J Clin Epidemiol 1989; 42:1185–1192.
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Author and Disclosure Information

Steven L. Cohn, MD
Director, Medical Consultation Service, Kings County Hospital Center, and Clinical Professor of Medicine, SUNY Downstate, Brooklyn, NY

BobbieJean Sweitzer, MD
Director, Anesthesia Perioperative Medicine Clinic; Associate Professor of Medicine; and Associate Professor of Anesthesia and Critical Care, University of Chicago, Chicago, IL

Correspondence: Steven L. Cohn, MD, SUNY Downstate, 450 Clarkson Ave.—Box 68, Brooklyn, NY 11203 (steven.cohn@downstate.edu), and BobbieJean Sweitzer, MD, Anesthesia Perioperative Medicine Clinic, University of Chicago, 5841 S. Maryland Ave., Chicago, IL 60637 (bsweitzer@dacc.uchicago.edu)

Both authors have indicated that they have no financial relationships with commercial interests that have a direct bearing on the subject matter of this article.

This article was developed from an audio transcript of a joint presentation by Drs. Cohn and Sweitzer at the 4th Annual Perioperative Medicine Summit. The transcript was edited by the Cleveland Clinic Journal of Medicine staff for clarity and conciseness, and was then reviewed, revised, and approved by Drs. Cohn and Sweitzer.

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S72-S78
Author and Disclosure Information

Steven L. Cohn, MD
Director, Medical Consultation Service, Kings County Hospital Center, and Clinical Professor of Medicine, SUNY Downstate, Brooklyn, NY

BobbieJean Sweitzer, MD
Director, Anesthesia Perioperative Medicine Clinic; Associate Professor of Medicine; and Associate Professor of Anesthesia and Critical Care, University of Chicago, Chicago, IL

Correspondence: Steven L. Cohn, MD, SUNY Downstate, 450 Clarkson Ave.—Box 68, Brooklyn, NY 11203 (steven.cohn@downstate.edu), and BobbieJean Sweitzer, MD, Anesthesia Perioperative Medicine Clinic, University of Chicago, 5841 S. Maryland Ave., Chicago, IL 60637 (bsweitzer@dacc.uchicago.edu)

Both authors have indicated that they have no financial relationships with commercial interests that have a direct bearing on the subject matter of this article.

This article was developed from an audio transcript of a joint presentation by Drs. Cohn and Sweitzer at the 4th Annual Perioperative Medicine Summit. The transcript was edited by the Cleveland Clinic Journal of Medicine staff for clarity and conciseness, and was then reviewed, revised, and approved by Drs. Cohn and Sweitzer.

Author and Disclosure Information

Steven L. Cohn, MD
Director, Medical Consultation Service, Kings County Hospital Center, and Clinical Professor of Medicine, SUNY Downstate, Brooklyn, NY

BobbieJean Sweitzer, MD
Director, Anesthesia Perioperative Medicine Clinic; Associate Professor of Medicine; and Associate Professor of Anesthesia and Critical Care, University of Chicago, Chicago, IL

Correspondence: Steven L. Cohn, MD, SUNY Downstate, 450 Clarkson Ave.—Box 68, Brooklyn, NY 11203 (steven.cohn@downstate.edu), and BobbieJean Sweitzer, MD, Anesthesia Perioperative Medicine Clinic, University of Chicago, 5841 S. Maryland Ave., Chicago, IL 60637 (bsweitzer@dacc.uchicago.edu)

Both authors have indicated that they have no financial relationships with commercial interests that have a direct bearing on the subject matter of this article.

This article was developed from an audio transcript of a joint presentation by Drs. Cohn and Sweitzer at the 4th Annual Perioperative Medicine Summit. The transcript was edited by the Cleveland Clinic Journal of Medicine staff for clarity and conciseness, and was then reviewed, revised, and approved by Drs. Cohn and Sweitzer.

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CASE 1: RADICAL PROSTATECTOMY IN A MAN WITH ACUTE DEEP VEIN THROMBOSIS

A 69-year-old man is seen in the preoperative clinic 1 week before a scheduled radical prostatectomy. He has been diagnosed with femoral deep vein thrombosis (DVT) following a complaint of calf soreness.

Question 1.1: How would you treat him for his DVT?

A. Intravenous (IV) unfractionated heparin (UFH)

B. Low-molecular-weight heparin (LMWH)

C. Inferior vena cava (IVC) filter

D. Combination of pharmacologic therapy and then an IVC filter

Dr. Steven L. Cohn: The latest edition of the American College of Chest Physicians (ACCP) evidence-based guidelines on antithrombotic therapy recommends the use of therapeutic-dose subcutaneous LMWH over IV UFH for initial treatment of acute DVT in the outpatient or inpatient setting.1 Additionally, indications for an IVC filter include the prevention of pulmonary embolism (PE) in a patient with DVT who requires full-dose anticoagulation but cannot receive it, as would be the case here if the patient proceeds with surgery as scheduled. So if surgery will be postponed, the best option is LMWH; if surgery will not be postponed, the best answer is a combination of pharmacologic therapy with low-dose LMWH and an IVC filter, preferably a retrievable one.2

Question 1.2: You recommend postponing surgery, but the patient is worried about metastatic disease. For how long should surgery be postponed?

A. 2 weeks

B. 1 month

C. 2 months

D. 3 months

E. 6 months

Dr. Cohn: In the absence of anticoagulation therapy, the risk of venous thromboembolism (VTE) is approximately 40% (~1% per day) during the first month following an acute VTE and then declines markedly, to approximately 10%, during the second and third months following the acute event.3 Therefore, I would suggest that the patient wait at least 1 month after an acute DVT before undergoing surgery.

Dr. BobbieJean Sweitzer: This patient is in a hypercoagulable state, and the surgery itself will induce excess hypercoagulability. With a femoral DVT already present, his risk of VTE or PE is likely to be greater than 1% per day during the first month. If he does develop a PE, it may potentially be fatal.

Question 1.3: According to the patient, the surgeon and the internist discussed options, but the surgeon “doesn’t believe in filters” and the patient doesn’t want to postpone the procedure, despite your recommendation. Two weeks later he shows up for surgery having stopped his LMWH 3 days before. What would you do?

A. Cancel the surgery and restart full-dose LMWH

B. Proceed with prophylactic-dose LMWH

C. Proceed after giving a full therapeutic dose

D. Insert a filter and give DVT prophylaxis

Dr. Cohn: A bridging protocol should have been discussed with the surgeon and anesthesiologist before the procedure. Therapeutic levels of LMWH persist as long as 18 hours after discontinuation; therefore, the ACCP recommends interrupting LMWH 24 hours before surgery.4

Dr. Sweitzer: The lack of a bridging protocol in this case created a problem. The patient was afraid to continue anticoagulation after hearing the internist and surgeon disagree about the plan, and thus stopped it entirely, and he did not want to delay surgery because he was fearful of metastasis. The surgeon was adamant that IVC filters don’t work. The internist was concerned that the patient was at high risk for a PE. Even though the documented risk of postponing radical prostatectomy for a short time is inconsequential, I was convinced that the patient would not believe this if metastasis were to develop in the future.

Question 1.4: How would you have managed his anticoagulation perioperatively?

A. Stop LMWH 12 hours before surgery and restart at full dose 12 to 24 hours after surgery

B. Stop LMWH 24 hours before surgery and restart at full dose 24 hours after surgery

C. Stop LMWH 24 hours before surgery and restart prophylactic dosing 12 to 24 hours after surgery, and then full-dose LMWH in 48 to 72 hours

D. Stop LMWH 24 hours before surgery and restart at full dose 72 hours after surgery

Dr. Cohn: The correct timing for stopping LMWH is 24 hours before surgery. As for how to resume anticoagulation in patients at high risk for VTE or those undergoing major surgery, the latest ACCP guidelines recommend the following4:

  • Reinitiation of anticoagulation 12 to 24 hours postoperatively, assuming adequate hemostasis in patients not at high risk for bleeding
  • Use of a prophylactic dose or no anticoagulation for up to 72 hours if the patient is at high risk for bleeding.

These recommendations are a departure from previous practice, in which we routinely restarted anticoagulation 6 to 12 hours postoperatively.

Dr. Sweitzer: According to guidelines from the American Society of Regional Anesthesia and Pain Medicine (ASRA),5 if twice-daily LMWH is stopped 24 hours ahead of time (as long as patients have normal renal function), it is safe to perform epidural or spinal anesthesia, if either is an option. If full-dose UFH is used, the partial thrombo­plastin time (PTT) is monitored and central neuraxial blockade may be done if the PTT is in the normal range, which typically is 2 to 6 hours after UFH is stopped.

Additionally, the platelet count should be checked every 3 days postoperatively while the patient is on UFH or LMWH. It may be just as important to monitor the platelet count preoperatively if the patient has been on UFH or LMWH for an extended duration, especially if a central neuraxial anesthetic technique is planned.

Dr. Cohn: The reason for monitoring the platelet count is the potential for heparin-induced thrombocytopenia in patients on UFH. I recently encountered a patient who developed postoperative heparin-induced thrombo­cytopenia with thrombosis while on LMWH, which is relatively uncommon compared with UFH.

Case resolution

After much discussion of the risk of a significant PE with the patient, family, urologist, and vascular surgeon, it is decided that a temporary IVC filter will be placed in the operating room immediately after induction of general anesthesia and before the prostatectomy. The operation is delayed about 1 hour to allow this option. The patient is successfully treated and has the IVC filter removed 1 month postoperatively.

 

 

CASE 2: RADICAL CYSTECTOMY IN ELDERLY MAN WITH CARDIAC RISK FACTORS

A 78-year-old obese Russian-speaking man is seen in the preoperative clinic prior to a scheduled radical cystectomy for highly invasive bladder cancer. He is a poor historian and argues with the several family members accompanying him, but it is determined that his medical history includes hypertension, diabetes mellitus, a myocardial infarction (MI) 5 years previously (in Russia), and stable angina that is determined to be class II.

He had no previous work-up and no electrocardiogram (ECG). His medications are aspirin, metoprolol, and metformin. His blood pressure is 190/100 mm Hg, heart rate 90 beats per minute, and body mass index 32. On examination, there is no murmur, S3 gallop, or rales. His blood glucose is 220 mg/dL, and his creatinine is slightly elevated (1.4 mg/dL). ECG verifies a prior MI.

Question 2.1: Which of the following additional tests should be ordered preoperatively?

A. Hemoglobin (Hb) A1c

B. Lipid profile

C. Both

D. Neither

Dr. Sweitzer: Because the surgery is not elective, no immediate benefit would be achieved by ordering either an HbA1c or a lipid profile. However, if you view the preoperative evaluation as an opportunity to manage risk factors over the long term, then it may be a good idea to order the lipid profile because this patient has rarely engaged the health care system. Likewise, the HbA1c can be ordered to set in place his long-term management. Sometimes we focus on the preoperative visit only in the context of the surgery, but if a test or intervention is appropriate and needed for long-term management, then it is appropriate to do now.

Dr. Cohn: There is no evidence to support using the preoperative HbA1c to alter management decisions. I would not postpone surgery based on the HbA1c value, as I would if his glucose level were 600 mg/dL. Most of the studies that have assessed postoperative complications based on preoperative HbA1c did not control for postoperative glucose levels. The incidence of complications varies based on the type of complication and the type of surgery.

Similarly, I would not use lipid values to guide management of this patient. Studies suggest that perioperative statin therapy may reduce postoperative morbidity and mortality in patients undergoing vascular surgery (see article by Poldermans on page S79 of this supplement), but our patient already has indications for a statin—a remote MI and diabetes—independent of what his lipid values are.

Question 2.2: How would you manage his elevated blood pressure (190/100 mm Hg)?

A. Discontinue metoprolol and start a different antihypertensive drug

B. Increase the metoprolol dose

C. Continue metoprolol and add a second drug

D. Observe him on his current regimen

Dr. Cohn: I would increase the dose of metoprolol and consider adding another drug, in view of his heart rate (90 beats per minute) and his cardiac status. Beta-blocker therapy should not be discontinued because doing so in the perioperative period is associated with an increased risk of adverse events such as cardiac death and MI.

Dr. Sweitzer: I would push up the metoprolol a bit to reduce the heart rate, knowing that beta-blockers are probably not the most efficacious antihypertensive agents. I would caution against starting an angiotensin-converting enzyme (ACE) inhibitor or an angiotensin receptor blocker (ARB) because he is scheduled to undergo a fairly significant procedure with expected blood loss and fluid shifts, and either of those agents in combination with a beta-blocker would be challenging to manage on the day of surgery.

Question 2.3: How would you manage his metformin perioperatively?

A. Discontinue it 48 hours preoperatively

B. Discontinue it 24 hours preoperatively

C. Withhold it on the morning of surgery

D. Continue it on the morning of surgery

Dr. Sweitzer: We routinely advise patients to hold all their oral diabetes medications the morning of surgery, primarily because many anesthesiologists are uncertain about the differing risks of hypoglycemia associated with the various oral agents.

Most of us will never see a patient who has lactic acidosis from metformin use. A systematic literature review and analysis found no increase in the risk of lactic acidosis with metformin compared with other oral hypoglycemics,6 so fear of lactic acidosis is not a valid reason to discontinue metformin. In fact, I think it is inappropriate to ever postpone or cancel surgery simply because the patient inadvertently took metformin on the morning of surgery. Some may argue that patients with renal insufficiency are at higher risk of lactic acidosis from metformin use on the morning of surgery, but keep in mind that renal insufficiency is a relative contra­indication to metformin use in the first place. Unless the patient is scheduled for a bilateral nephrectomy, his or her renal function is not going to be acutely reduced enough to enable a morning dose of metformin to cause lactic acidosis.

Dr. Cohn: Additionally, in a recent study of patients undergoing coronary artery bypass graft surgery (CABG), there was no increased risk of in-hospital morbidity or mortality in patients who received metformin on the morning of surgery,7 although I typically stop it 24 hours before major surgery.

Question 2.4: With respect to statin therapy, which course would you choose preoperatively?

A. Start a statin at a low dose

B. Start a statin at an intermediate dose

C. Start a statin at a high dose

D. Do not start a statin

Dr. Cohn: The answer to this question is not clear cut. The reason not to start a prophylactic statin would be the lack of evidence of benefit in patients undergoing noncardiac, nonvascular surgery, although there is evidence of potential benefit in patients undergoing vascular surgery.* The arguments in favor of starting a statin are that this patient has independent indications for a statin and the planned surgery is a high-risk procedure.

(* Editor’s note: In the time since this summit, results of the DECREASE-IV trial were published [Dunkelgrun et al, Ann Surg 2009; 249:921–926], showing a statisically nonsignificant trend toward improved outcomes at 30 days with fluvastatin in intermediate-risk patients undergoing noncardiovascular surgery.)

In cohort studies, perioperative death rates have been lower in statin recipients than in those not taking a statin.8 In the Dutch Echographic Cardiac Risk Evaluation Applying Stress Echo III (DECREASE III), which randomized noncardiac vascular surgery patients to perioperative fluvastatin or placebo, rates of MI and the composite end point of nonfatal MI or cardiovascular death were significantly lower in the statin group than in the placebo group.9

Question 2.5: Which of the following cardiac tests would you order preoperatively?

A. Exercise ECG

B. Dobutamine stress echocardiogram

C. Dipyridamole nuclear imaging

D. Coronary angiography

E. No further cardiac testing

Dr. Cohn: I wouldn’t do any cardiac testing since this patient needs surgery for his malignancy and the results of any testing would be highly unlikely to change management, in terms of canceling the surgery. This approach is consistent with the 2007 guidelines on perioperative cardiovascular evaluation for noncardiac surgery issued by the American College of Cardiology (ACC) and the American Heart Association (AHA).10

Dr. Sweitzer: I would differ on this question. This patient has not been evaluated adequately for his coronary artery disease. He has poor functional capacity that complicates assessment of his symptoms. He also has diabetes, so he is more likely to have silent myocardial ischemia. At age 78, he is understandably concerned about his survival: radical cystectomy is a major operation associated with significant blood loss, fluid shifts, and a long-term recuperative state. In this case, a cardiac evaluation may change management, not in terms of considering coronary revascularization before the surgery, but in terms of affecting the assessment of his chance of surviving this major operation, his life span following the operation, and his quality of life. For example, a highly positive dobutamine stress echo­cardiogram or certain wall motion abnormalities would suggest that he might not be protected even by optimal perioperative medical management.

Question 2.6: Which of the following would you do pre­operatively to assess pulmonary risk?

A. Obtain pulmonary function tests

B. Order a sleep study

C. Both

D. Neither

Dr. Sweitzer: There is no evidence supporting routine pulmonary function tests for patients undergoing procedures other than lung resection. If obstructive sleep apnea were suspected, I would order a sleep study only if I had access to one quickly to avoid delaying the surgery. Cancer surgery should never be delayed to get a sleep study. However, if this patient were seen in the primary care clinic, I would order a sleep study and, if indicated, put him on continuous positive airway pressure (CPAP). Whether or not preoperative CPAP makes a difference hasn’t been shown. No randomized controlled trials have been conducted, but there are some suggestions that the risks of ischemia and atrial arrhythmias in patients with known coronary artery disease can be reduced with CPAP. It is not always easy to initiate CPAP postoperatively because the number of CPAP machines is limited and titration by a respiratory technician is required, which is typically done in a sleep lab.

How the case was actually managed

Neither an HbA1c measurement nor a lipid profile was ordered preoperatively, for lack of supportive evidence. The patient was continued on his beta-blocker and the dosage was increased sufficiently to control his blood pressure and heart rate. Metformin was continued, and statin therapy was begun preoperatively in light of the patient’s independent indications for it and the high-risk nature of the procedure. Stress testing was not ordered, in light of the lack of indication, given the patient’s stable angina. The patient refused a sleep study. The operation was lengthy and involved significant blood loss. The patient had a complicated postoperative course and ultimately died from multiorgan failure.

 

 

CASE 3: OPERATIONS OF VARIABLE RISK IN ELDERLY MAN WITH ACTIVE CARDIAC CONDITION

Scenario A: A 75-year-old man with diabetes, class III angina, and Q waves in inferior leads on his ECG is scheduled for elective femoropopliteal bypass surgery. His medications include isosorbide mononitrate (120 mg), amlodipine (10 mg), metoprolol controlled release (100 mg), atorvastatin (80 mg), insulin, and aspirin (81 mg). His heart rate is 64 beats per minute, blood pressure is controlled at 120/80 mm Hg, low-density lipoprotein cholesterol is 80 mg/dL, and creatinine is 1.5 μmol/L.

Scenario B: Consider the same patient undergoing elective cholecystectomy instead of a femoropopliteal bypass.

Scenario C: Consider the same patient scheduled for a cystoscopy instead of the other procedures. He had one episode of gross hematuria 1 week ago that resolved. Work-up by his urologist included a urinalysis and culture that were normal, cytology that was negative for malignancy, and a sonogram and computed tomography scan that were both negative. He has had no further bleeding and is not anemic. The urologist wants to do the cystoscopy for the sake of completeness.

Question 3.1: What would be your preoperative course of action in the above scenarios?

A. Order a dobutamine stress echocardiogram

B. Order nuclear imaging with dipyridamole or adenosine

C. Order coronary angiography

D. Order a resting two-dimensional echocardiogram

E. Continue his current medications and send to surgery with no further testing

Dr. Cohn: This is a man with an active cardiac condition and class III angina, which is considered severe angina in the ACC/AHA 2007 guidelines on peri­operative cardiac evaluation and care.10 The guidelines’ recommendation is to delay surgery for further evaluation and treatment. He is already on maximal medical therapy, which has failed to control his symptoms. He has poor exercise capacity. The only difference among the case scenarios is a variation in surgical risk.

This patient has independent indications for coronary angiography regardless of whether or not he’s undergoing surgery. He deserves evaluation for possible revascularization to improve his quality of life and symptoms.

I would send the patient to the catheterization lab in every one of these instances, with the possible exception of the cystoscopy scenario, where one could argue that revascularization with stenting would require antiplatelet therapy that might increase the bleeding risk, and also that the antiplatelet therapy would have to be interrupted for the cystoscopy, potentially increasing thrombotic risk.

Dr. Sweitzer: I disagree. The ACC/AHA 2007 guidelines do not recommend going directly to catheterization but rather recommend delaying surgery for further evaluation and treatment.10 We must ask whether this patient is truly receiving optimal medical management. After all, he is not on an ACE inhibitor or an ARB.

We must also consider whether the surgery is truly elective. In the first scenario, if he has peripheral vascular disease, he is likely to develop gangrene and have a further decrease in exercise capacity, which reduces his functional ability and increases his risk of comorbid conditions. He is at significant risk of developing worsening renal insufficiency or renal failure if he undergoes angiography. Coronary revascularization will delay treatment of his peripheral vascular disease. The Coronary Artery Revascularization Prophylaxis (CARP) trial showed no benefit of coronary revascularization relative to medical management in patients undergoing vascular surgery,11 as is planned for this patient. I believe one must balance two competing risks and have an in-depth discussion with the patient.

In the second scenario, not treating gallstones or preventing cholelithiasis poses more risk to the health of this diabetic patient than does elective surgery if he needs a cholecystectomy. Emergency surgery, especially for acute cholecystitis, also significantly increases the risk of a cardiac event.

In the third scenario, the cystoscopy may uncover bladder cancer, which may be adversely affected by a delay of surgery. Regardless, the patient had gross hematuria and would be at risk for further bleeding should he undergo stenting with the requisite antiplatelet therapy.

Catheterization is not normally recommended unless CABG or stenting is being considered, yet I have seen no data that either of these procedures prolongs life except in very limited circumstances such as left main disease treated with bypass grafting. Though it is true that CABG reduces the incidence and severity of angina, it does not modify the physiologic cause of angina but rather may result in symptom improvement by damaging somatic nerve fibers to the heart. Putting a stent in this patient would be like applying a bandage: his symptoms will likely recur if he does not receive optimal medical management.

In a 2007 science advisory, several major medical societies cautioned against percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI) with drug-eluting stent placement in patients expected to undergo noncardiac surgery that would require interruption of antiplatelet therapy in the following 12 months (and against PCI with bare metal stent placement in patients undergoing such surgery in the following 4 to 6 weeks).12 Therefore, I would not recommend catheterization for a patient whose noncardiac disease is likely to require surgery in the very near future, as is the case in each of the surgical scenarios above. One could consider noninvasive stress testing, which would be a safer approach and would almost certainly identify either significant stenosis of the left main coronary artery or three-vessel disease, which would be the only possible reasons to recommend CABG. I don’t believe there is any role for PCI for this patient.

Dr. Cohn: I argue for symptom relief even if it doesn’t prolong life. This patient cannot walk across the room without having symptoms despite taking multiple medications. I think he deserves a chance at revascularization if the angiogram shows he has a stenosis amenable to it, but I agree that a drug-eluting stent should not be placed if we know that he will undergo surgery within a few months.

 

 

CASE 4: VENTRAL HERNIA REPAIR IN A MIDDLE-AGED WOMAN

A 60-year-old woman is scheduled for ventral hernia repair. Her medical history is unremarkable, with the exception of hypertension. She denies any bleeding problems and had no complications after a laparoscopic cholecystectomy 10 years ago. She has no family history of bleeding disorders.

Question 4.1: Would you order a prothrombin time (PT)/partial thromboplastin time (PTT)?

A. Yes

B. No

Dr. Cohn: I would not.

Dr. Sweitzer: I agree.

Question 4.2: Although not requested, a PT/PTT was ordered anyway. The PT is normal (12.2 sec/12 sec) and the PTT is abnormal (40 sec/25 sec). What is the most likely cause of the PTT abnormality?

A. Laboratory error

B. Factor VII deficiency

C. Factor IX deficiency

D. Factor XI deficiency

E. Factor XII deficiency

Dr. Cohn: The most likely cause is a sample with insufficient blood in the tube. The test wasn’t indicated in the first place, but now it must be done again.

Question 4.3: The PTT is repeated and remains abnormal: 42 sec/25 sec. Mixing studies correct the abnormality to 29 sec/25 sec. Based on this information, what is the most likely cause of the PTT abnormality?

A. Laboratory error

B. Lupus anticoagulant

C. Prekallikrein factor deficiency

D. Factor XII deficiency

Dr. Cohn: This is not a case of lupus anticoagulant because the abnormal PTT was corrected by the mixing study. Causes of a prolonged PTT include deficiencies of factors XII, XI, and IX, so factor XII deficiency is the most likely explanation, though a deficiency higher up the coagulation cascade (ie, prekallikrein factor deficiency) is possible. In the absence of any personal or family bleeding history, it is unlikely to be a deficiency of factors VII or IX (the hemophiliac) or of factor XI, so a deficiency of factor XII or one of the prekallikrein factors is more likely.

Dr. Sweitzer: A mixing study is indeed the appropriate first step. It is ordered from the lab and involves mixing the patient’s blood with normal plasma and incubating the mixture. If the mixture corrects the PTT result, as was the case with this patient, it indicates a coagulation factor deficiency in the patient’s blood; if it doesn’t correct, that should prompt evaluation for lupus anticoagulant or the presence of some other protein or hormone that’s prolonging the PTT.

Question 4.4: How would you manage this patient perioperatively?

A. Fresh frozen plasma

B. Platelet transfusion

C. Cryoprecipitate

D. Factor VII

E. No treatment necessary

Dr. Cohn: No treatment is necessary. Factor XII deficiency does not cause bleeding, regardless of the PTT. Factor XI deficiency is associated with bleeding, but usually there is a family history or a personal history of bleeding with surgery.

Screening coagulation studies are not usually indicated in a patient without a personal or family history of bleeding, liver disease, alcohol or drug use, or current anticoagulant therapy. Such studies are usually normal in such patients, and when they are not, it’s usually because of a lab error or a disease (hypercoagulable state) or factor deficiency that does not cause bleeding

Dr. Sweitzer: However, if the PTT is prolonged, the cause should be identified, because if the patient is sent to the operating room without an explanation for the prolongation, the perioperative team might think the patient has a bleeding problem and use fresh frozen plasma too readily. Fresh frozen plasma is not appropriate for everyone and may actually make a potentially hypercoagulable state worse.

 

 

DISCUSSION

Question from the audience: It was said that use of ACE inhibitors and ARBs should be avoided around the time of surgery. I’ve done an extensive literature search and found minimal to no evidence to support this practice. To the contrary, I found fairly good evidence to indicate that heart failure can be exacerbated significantly and acutely, as early as within 24 hours, when patients are taken off their ACE inhibitor or ARB. I would like your viewpoint on this basic pathology in perioperative medicine.

Dr. Cohn: The literature on the use of ACE inhibitors or ARBs prior to noncardiac surgery consists of five studies with fewer than 500 patients in total, as recently reviewed by Rosenman et al.13 Although there was no excess of death or MI associated with taking these medications on the morning of surgery, they did increase the need for fluid and pressors.

Dr. Sweitzer: Patients with hypertension have bigger variations of blood pressure, both hypo- and hypertension, in the perioperative period. For this reason, it was standard of care 30 years ago to stop all antihypertensive drugs, including beta-blockers, preoperatively. We soon found that although this practice prevented many episodes of hypotension, it increased the occurrence of perioperative hypertension and the likelihood of cardiac events. It then became standard of care to always continue antihypertensive drugs on the morning of surgery. In the late 1980s and early 1990s, several studies showed that ACE inhibitors and ARBs were associated with a more profound drop in blood pressure upon induction of general anesthesia compared with other antihypertensives.

The usual ways we treat drops in blood pressure—with phenylephrine and ephedrine—are not very effective in treating hypotension associated with general anesthesia in patients taking ACE inhibitors or ARBs. Vasopressin is effective in treating refractory hypotension during surgery, but anesthesiologists don’t use it often. Reducing the doses of induction agents is another means of attenuating the hypotension induced by ACE inhibitors and ARBs.

We should not routinely stop ACE inhibitors and ARBs on the day of surgery, particularly in patients being treated for heart failure, angina, or a prior MI. My bias is to selectively hold ACE inhibitors and ARBs on the morning of surgery in patients who are undergoing a significant operation with a high likelihood of hypotension, have well-controlled preoperative blood pressure, are taking multiple antihypertensive agents, and do not have heart failure. Otherwise, patients should continue their ACE inhibitors and ARBs on the morning of surgery, and the anesthesiologist should be prepared for significant hypotension upon induction of anesthesia, alter anesthesia induction doses accordingly, have vasopressin handy, and avoid the temptation to treat hypotension with fluids or repeated doses of phenylephrine and ephedrine. The previous comment about concerns with ACE inhibitors and ARBs was in the context of initiating new therapies in the immediate preoperative period.

Question from the audience: Urinalysis is ordered for many patients undergoing orthopedic surgery, and invariably some bacteriuria is found. Can you comment on the value of urinalysis and subsequent treatment of abnormal results?

Dr. Cohn: I believe you should never order a urinalysis in an asymptomatic patient, with the exception of patients undergoing procedures that involve genitourinary or gynecologic instrumentation. Ordering a urinalysis before joint replacement has been promoted in the orthopedic literature on the theoretical grounds that bacteria might somehow seed and colonize the joint. Orthopedic surgeons like to do it, but I disregard their requests for it.

Dr. Sweitzer: One study showed that we’d need to spend $1.5 million on screening urinalysis for asymptomatic patients scheduled for joint replacement surgery in order to prevent one joint infection.14

Dr. Cohn: Also, patients are going to get their one dose of cephalosporin before surgery anyway, and that will probably knock out any bacteria that would be found on urinalysis.

Question from the audience: Can you clarify how the 2007 ACC/AHA perioperative guidelines define an active cardiac condition? The patient in your third case report had class III angina, or angina with less than usual activities, but nothing was presented to suggest that his symptoms were unstable. I would suggest that despite his class III symptoms, his angina was stable, and I would have continued down the algorithm rather than defining his cardiac condition as active and considering an intervention.

Dr. Cohn: An active cardiac condition is defined by the ACC as unstable coronary syndromes, which include acute (within the prior 7 days) or recent (within the prior 30 days) MI, unstable angina, and severe (class III or IV) angina.

CASE 1: RADICAL PROSTATECTOMY IN A MAN WITH ACUTE DEEP VEIN THROMBOSIS

A 69-year-old man is seen in the preoperative clinic 1 week before a scheduled radical prostatectomy. He has been diagnosed with femoral deep vein thrombosis (DVT) following a complaint of calf soreness.

Question 1.1: How would you treat him for his DVT?

A. Intravenous (IV) unfractionated heparin (UFH)

B. Low-molecular-weight heparin (LMWH)

C. Inferior vena cava (IVC) filter

D. Combination of pharmacologic therapy and then an IVC filter

Dr. Steven L. Cohn: The latest edition of the American College of Chest Physicians (ACCP) evidence-based guidelines on antithrombotic therapy recommends the use of therapeutic-dose subcutaneous LMWH over IV UFH for initial treatment of acute DVT in the outpatient or inpatient setting.1 Additionally, indications for an IVC filter include the prevention of pulmonary embolism (PE) in a patient with DVT who requires full-dose anticoagulation but cannot receive it, as would be the case here if the patient proceeds with surgery as scheduled. So if surgery will be postponed, the best option is LMWH; if surgery will not be postponed, the best answer is a combination of pharmacologic therapy with low-dose LMWH and an IVC filter, preferably a retrievable one.2

Question 1.2: You recommend postponing surgery, but the patient is worried about metastatic disease. For how long should surgery be postponed?

A. 2 weeks

B. 1 month

C. 2 months

D. 3 months

E. 6 months

Dr. Cohn: In the absence of anticoagulation therapy, the risk of venous thromboembolism (VTE) is approximately 40% (~1% per day) during the first month following an acute VTE and then declines markedly, to approximately 10%, during the second and third months following the acute event.3 Therefore, I would suggest that the patient wait at least 1 month after an acute DVT before undergoing surgery.

Dr. BobbieJean Sweitzer: This patient is in a hypercoagulable state, and the surgery itself will induce excess hypercoagulability. With a femoral DVT already present, his risk of VTE or PE is likely to be greater than 1% per day during the first month. If he does develop a PE, it may potentially be fatal.

Question 1.3: According to the patient, the surgeon and the internist discussed options, but the surgeon “doesn’t believe in filters” and the patient doesn’t want to postpone the procedure, despite your recommendation. Two weeks later he shows up for surgery having stopped his LMWH 3 days before. What would you do?

A. Cancel the surgery and restart full-dose LMWH

B. Proceed with prophylactic-dose LMWH

C. Proceed after giving a full therapeutic dose

D. Insert a filter and give DVT prophylaxis

Dr. Cohn: A bridging protocol should have been discussed with the surgeon and anesthesiologist before the procedure. Therapeutic levels of LMWH persist as long as 18 hours after discontinuation; therefore, the ACCP recommends interrupting LMWH 24 hours before surgery.4

Dr. Sweitzer: The lack of a bridging protocol in this case created a problem. The patient was afraid to continue anticoagulation after hearing the internist and surgeon disagree about the plan, and thus stopped it entirely, and he did not want to delay surgery because he was fearful of metastasis. The surgeon was adamant that IVC filters don’t work. The internist was concerned that the patient was at high risk for a PE. Even though the documented risk of postponing radical prostatectomy for a short time is inconsequential, I was convinced that the patient would not believe this if metastasis were to develop in the future.

Question 1.4: How would you have managed his anticoagulation perioperatively?

A. Stop LMWH 12 hours before surgery and restart at full dose 12 to 24 hours after surgery

B. Stop LMWH 24 hours before surgery and restart at full dose 24 hours after surgery

C. Stop LMWH 24 hours before surgery and restart prophylactic dosing 12 to 24 hours after surgery, and then full-dose LMWH in 48 to 72 hours

D. Stop LMWH 24 hours before surgery and restart at full dose 72 hours after surgery

Dr. Cohn: The correct timing for stopping LMWH is 24 hours before surgery. As for how to resume anticoagulation in patients at high risk for VTE or those undergoing major surgery, the latest ACCP guidelines recommend the following4:

  • Reinitiation of anticoagulation 12 to 24 hours postoperatively, assuming adequate hemostasis in patients not at high risk for bleeding
  • Use of a prophylactic dose or no anticoagulation for up to 72 hours if the patient is at high risk for bleeding.

These recommendations are a departure from previous practice, in which we routinely restarted anticoagulation 6 to 12 hours postoperatively.

Dr. Sweitzer: According to guidelines from the American Society of Regional Anesthesia and Pain Medicine (ASRA),5 if twice-daily LMWH is stopped 24 hours ahead of time (as long as patients have normal renal function), it is safe to perform epidural or spinal anesthesia, if either is an option. If full-dose UFH is used, the partial thrombo­plastin time (PTT) is monitored and central neuraxial blockade may be done if the PTT is in the normal range, which typically is 2 to 6 hours after UFH is stopped.

Additionally, the platelet count should be checked every 3 days postoperatively while the patient is on UFH or LMWH. It may be just as important to monitor the platelet count preoperatively if the patient has been on UFH or LMWH for an extended duration, especially if a central neuraxial anesthetic technique is planned.

Dr. Cohn: The reason for monitoring the platelet count is the potential for heparin-induced thrombocytopenia in patients on UFH. I recently encountered a patient who developed postoperative heparin-induced thrombo­cytopenia with thrombosis while on LMWH, which is relatively uncommon compared with UFH.

Case resolution

After much discussion of the risk of a significant PE with the patient, family, urologist, and vascular surgeon, it is decided that a temporary IVC filter will be placed in the operating room immediately after induction of general anesthesia and before the prostatectomy. The operation is delayed about 1 hour to allow this option. The patient is successfully treated and has the IVC filter removed 1 month postoperatively.

 

 

CASE 2: RADICAL CYSTECTOMY IN ELDERLY MAN WITH CARDIAC RISK FACTORS

A 78-year-old obese Russian-speaking man is seen in the preoperative clinic prior to a scheduled radical cystectomy for highly invasive bladder cancer. He is a poor historian and argues with the several family members accompanying him, but it is determined that his medical history includes hypertension, diabetes mellitus, a myocardial infarction (MI) 5 years previously (in Russia), and stable angina that is determined to be class II.

He had no previous work-up and no electrocardiogram (ECG). His medications are aspirin, metoprolol, and metformin. His blood pressure is 190/100 mm Hg, heart rate 90 beats per minute, and body mass index 32. On examination, there is no murmur, S3 gallop, or rales. His blood glucose is 220 mg/dL, and his creatinine is slightly elevated (1.4 mg/dL). ECG verifies a prior MI.

Question 2.1: Which of the following additional tests should be ordered preoperatively?

A. Hemoglobin (Hb) A1c

B. Lipid profile

C. Both

D. Neither

Dr. Sweitzer: Because the surgery is not elective, no immediate benefit would be achieved by ordering either an HbA1c or a lipid profile. However, if you view the preoperative evaluation as an opportunity to manage risk factors over the long term, then it may be a good idea to order the lipid profile because this patient has rarely engaged the health care system. Likewise, the HbA1c can be ordered to set in place his long-term management. Sometimes we focus on the preoperative visit only in the context of the surgery, but if a test or intervention is appropriate and needed for long-term management, then it is appropriate to do now.

Dr. Cohn: There is no evidence to support using the preoperative HbA1c to alter management decisions. I would not postpone surgery based on the HbA1c value, as I would if his glucose level were 600 mg/dL. Most of the studies that have assessed postoperative complications based on preoperative HbA1c did not control for postoperative glucose levels. The incidence of complications varies based on the type of complication and the type of surgery.

Similarly, I would not use lipid values to guide management of this patient. Studies suggest that perioperative statin therapy may reduce postoperative morbidity and mortality in patients undergoing vascular surgery (see article by Poldermans on page S79 of this supplement), but our patient already has indications for a statin—a remote MI and diabetes—independent of what his lipid values are.

Question 2.2: How would you manage his elevated blood pressure (190/100 mm Hg)?

A. Discontinue metoprolol and start a different antihypertensive drug

B. Increase the metoprolol dose

C. Continue metoprolol and add a second drug

D. Observe him on his current regimen

Dr. Cohn: I would increase the dose of metoprolol and consider adding another drug, in view of his heart rate (90 beats per minute) and his cardiac status. Beta-blocker therapy should not be discontinued because doing so in the perioperative period is associated with an increased risk of adverse events such as cardiac death and MI.

Dr. Sweitzer: I would push up the metoprolol a bit to reduce the heart rate, knowing that beta-blockers are probably not the most efficacious antihypertensive agents. I would caution against starting an angiotensin-converting enzyme (ACE) inhibitor or an angiotensin receptor blocker (ARB) because he is scheduled to undergo a fairly significant procedure with expected blood loss and fluid shifts, and either of those agents in combination with a beta-blocker would be challenging to manage on the day of surgery.

Question 2.3: How would you manage his metformin perioperatively?

A. Discontinue it 48 hours preoperatively

B. Discontinue it 24 hours preoperatively

C. Withhold it on the morning of surgery

D. Continue it on the morning of surgery

Dr. Sweitzer: We routinely advise patients to hold all their oral diabetes medications the morning of surgery, primarily because many anesthesiologists are uncertain about the differing risks of hypoglycemia associated with the various oral agents.

Most of us will never see a patient who has lactic acidosis from metformin use. A systematic literature review and analysis found no increase in the risk of lactic acidosis with metformin compared with other oral hypoglycemics,6 so fear of lactic acidosis is not a valid reason to discontinue metformin. In fact, I think it is inappropriate to ever postpone or cancel surgery simply because the patient inadvertently took metformin on the morning of surgery. Some may argue that patients with renal insufficiency are at higher risk of lactic acidosis from metformin use on the morning of surgery, but keep in mind that renal insufficiency is a relative contra­indication to metformin use in the first place. Unless the patient is scheduled for a bilateral nephrectomy, his or her renal function is not going to be acutely reduced enough to enable a morning dose of metformin to cause lactic acidosis.

Dr. Cohn: Additionally, in a recent study of patients undergoing coronary artery bypass graft surgery (CABG), there was no increased risk of in-hospital morbidity or mortality in patients who received metformin on the morning of surgery,7 although I typically stop it 24 hours before major surgery.

Question 2.4: With respect to statin therapy, which course would you choose preoperatively?

A. Start a statin at a low dose

B. Start a statin at an intermediate dose

C. Start a statin at a high dose

D. Do not start a statin

Dr. Cohn: The answer to this question is not clear cut. The reason not to start a prophylactic statin would be the lack of evidence of benefit in patients undergoing noncardiac, nonvascular surgery, although there is evidence of potential benefit in patients undergoing vascular surgery.* The arguments in favor of starting a statin are that this patient has independent indications for a statin and the planned surgery is a high-risk procedure.

(* Editor’s note: In the time since this summit, results of the DECREASE-IV trial were published [Dunkelgrun et al, Ann Surg 2009; 249:921–926], showing a statisically nonsignificant trend toward improved outcomes at 30 days with fluvastatin in intermediate-risk patients undergoing noncardiovascular surgery.)

In cohort studies, perioperative death rates have been lower in statin recipients than in those not taking a statin.8 In the Dutch Echographic Cardiac Risk Evaluation Applying Stress Echo III (DECREASE III), which randomized noncardiac vascular surgery patients to perioperative fluvastatin or placebo, rates of MI and the composite end point of nonfatal MI or cardiovascular death were significantly lower in the statin group than in the placebo group.9

Question 2.5: Which of the following cardiac tests would you order preoperatively?

A. Exercise ECG

B. Dobutamine stress echocardiogram

C. Dipyridamole nuclear imaging

D. Coronary angiography

E. No further cardiac testing

Dr. Cohn: I wouldn’t do any cardiac testing since this patient needs surgery for his malignancy and the results of any testing would be highly unlikely to change management, in terms of canceling the surgery. This approach is consistent with the 2007 guidelines on perioperative cardiovascular evaluation for noncardiac surgery issued by the American College of Cardiology (ACC) and the American Heart Association (AHA).10

Dr. Sweitzer: I would differ on this question. This patient has not been evaluated adequately for his coronary artery disease. He has poor functional capacity that complicates assessment of his symptoms. He also has diabetes, so he is more likely to have silent myocardial ischemia. At age 78, he is understandably concerned about his survival: radical cystectomy is a major operation associated with significant blood loss, fluid shifts, and a long-term recuperative state. In this case, a cardiac evaluation may change management, not in terms of considering coronary revascularization before the surgery, but in terms of affecting the assessment of his chance of surviving this major operation, his life span following the operation, and his quality of life. For example, a highly positive dobutamine stress echo­cardiogram or certain wall motion abnormalities would suggest that he might not be protected even by optimal perioperative medical management.

Question 2.6: Which of the following would you do pre­operatively to assess pulmonary risk?

A. Obtain pulmonary function tests

B. Order a sleep study

C. Both

D. Neither

Dr. Sweitzer: There is no evidence supporting routine pulmonary function tests for patients undergoing procedures other than lung resection. If obstructive sleep apnea were suspected, I would order a sleep study only if I had access to one quickly to avoid delaying the surgery. Cancer surgery should never be delayed to get a sleep study. However, if this patient were seen in the primary care clinic, I would order a sleep study and, if indicated, put him on continuous positive airway pressure (CPAP). Whether or not preoperative CPAP makes a difference hasn’t been shown. No randomized controlled trials have been conducted, but there are some suggestions that the risks of ischemia and atrial arrhythmias in patients with known coronary artery disease can be reduced with CPAP. It is not always easy to initiate CPAP postoperatively because the number of CPAP machines is limited and titration by a respiratory technician is required, which is typically done in a sleep lab.

How the case was actually managed

Neither an HbA1c measurement nor a lipid profile was ordered preoperatively, for lack of supportive evidence. The patient was continued on his beta-blocker and the dosage was increased sufficiently to control his blood pressure and heart rate. Metformin was continued, and statin therapy was begun preoperatively in light of the patient’s independent indications for it and the high-risk nature of the procedure. Stress testing was not ordered, in light of the lack of indication, given the patient’s stable angina. The patient refused a sleep study. The operation was lengthy and involved significant blood loss. The patient had a complicated postoperative course and ultimately died from multiorgan failure.

 

 

CASE 3: OPERATIONS OF VARIABLE RISK IN ELDERLY MAN WITH ACTIVE CARDIAC CONDITION

Scenario A: A 75-year-old man with diabetes, class III angina, and Q waves in inferior leads on his ECG is scheduled for elective femoropopliteal bypass surgery. His medications include isosorbide mononitrate (120 mg), amlodipine (10 mg), metoprolol controlled release (100 mg), atorvastatin (80 mg), insulin, and aspirin (81 mg). His heart rate is 64 beats per minute, blood pressure is controlled at 120/80 mm Hg, low-density lipoprotein cholesterol is 80 mg/dL, and creatinine is 1.5 μmol/L.

Scenario B: Consider the same patient undergoing elective cholecystectomy instead of a femoropopliteal bypass.

Scenario C: Consider the same patient scheduled for a cystoscopy instead of the other procedures. He had one episode of gross hematuria 1 week ago that resolved. Work-up by his urologist included a urinalysis and culture that were normal, cytology that was negative for malignancy, and a sonogram and computed tomography scan that were both negative. He has had no further bleeding and is not anemic. The urologist wants to do the cystoscopy for the sake of completeness.

Question 3.1: What would be your preoperative course of action in the above scenarios?

A. Order a dobutamine stress echocardiogram

B. Order nuclear imaging with dipyridamole or adenosine

C. Order coronary angiography

D. Order a resting two-dimensional echocardiogram

E. Continue his current medications and send to surgery with no further testing

Dr. Cohn: This is a man with an active cardiac condition and class III angina, which is considered severe angina in the ACC/AHA 2007 guidelines on peri­operative cardiac evaluation and care.10 The guidelines’ recommendation is to delay surgery for further evaluation and treatment. He is already on maximal medical therapy, which has failed to control his symptoms. He has poor exercise capacity. The only difference among the case scenarios is a variation in surgical risk.

This patient has independent indications for coronary angiography regardless of whether or not he’s undergoing surgery. He deserves evaluation for possible revascularization to improve his quality of life and symptoms.

I would send the patient to the catheterization lab in every one of these instances, with the possible exception of the cystoscopy scenario, where one could argue that revascularization with stenting would require antiplatelet therapy that might increase the bleeding risk, and also that the antiplatelet therapy would have to be interrupted for the cystoscopy, potentially increasing thrombotic risk.

Dr. Sweitzer: I disagree. The ACC/AHA 2007 guidelines do not recommend going directly to catheterization but rather recommend delaying surgery for further evaluation and treatment.10 We must ask whether this patient is truly receiving optimal medical management. After all, he is not on an ACE inhibitor or an ARB.

We must also consider whether the surgery is truly elective. In the first scenario, if he has peripheral vascular disease, he is likely to develop gangrene and have a further decrease in exercise capacity, which reduces his functional ability and increases his risk of comorbid conditions. He is at significant risk of developing worsening renal insufficiency or renal failure if he undergoes angiography. Coronary revascularization will delay treatment of his peripheral vascular disease. The Coronary Artery Revascularization Prophylaxis (CARP) trial showed no benefit of coronary revascularization relative to medical management in patients undergoing vascular surgery,11 as is planned for this patient. I believe one must balance two competing risks and have an in-depth discussion with the patient.

In the second scenario, not treating gallstones or preventing cholelithiasis poses more risk to the health of this diabetic patient than does elective surgery if he needs a cholecystectomy. Emergency surgery, especially for acute cholecystitis, also significantly increases the risk of a cardiac event.

In the third scenario, the cystoscopy may uncover bladder cancer, which may be adversely affected by a delay of surgery. Regardless, the patient had gross hematuria and would be at risk for further bleeding should he undergo stenting with the requisite antiplatelet therapy.

Catheterization is not normally recommended unless CABG or stenting is being considered, yet I have seen no data that either of these procedures prolongs life except in very limited circumstances such as left main disease treated with bypass grafting. Though it is true that CABG reduces the incidence and severity of angina, it does not modify the physiologic cause of angina but rather may result in symptom improvement by damaging somatic nerve fibers to the heart. Putting a stent in this patient would be like applying a bandage: his symptoms will likely recur if he does not receive optimal medical management.

In a 2007 science advisory, several major medical societies cautioned against percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI) with drug-eluting stent placement in patients expected to undergo noncardiac surgery that would require interruption of antiplatelet therapy in the following 12 months (and against PCI with bare metal stent placement in patients undergoing such surgery in the following 4 to 6 weeks).12 Therefore, I would not recommend catheterization for a patient whose noncardiac disease is likely to require surgery in the very near future, as is the case in each of the surgical scenarios above. One could consider noninvasive stress testing, which would be a safer approach and would almost certainly identify either significant stenosis of the left main coronary artery or three-vessel disease, which would be the only possible reasons to recommend CABG. I don’t believe there is any role for PCI for this patient.

Dr. Cohn: I argue for symptom relief even if it doesn’t prolong life. This patient cannot walk across the room without having symptoms despite taking multiple medications. I think he deserves a chance at revascularization if the angiogram shows he has a stenosis amenable to it, but I agree that a drug-eluting stent should not be placed if we know that he will undergo surgery within a few months.

 

 

CASE 4: VENTRAL HERNIA REPAIR IN A MIDDLE-AGED WOMAN

A 60-year-old woman is scheduled for ventral hernia repair. Her medical history is unremarkable, with the exception of hypertension. She denies any bleeding problems and had no complications after a laparoscopic cholecystectomy 10 years ago. She has no family history of bleeding disorders.

Question 4.1: Would you order a prothrombin time (PT)/partial thromboplastin time (PTT)?

A. Yes

B. No

Dr. Cohn: I would not.

Dr. Sweitzer: I agree.

Question 4.2: Although not requested, a PT/PTT was ordered anyway. The PT is normal (12.2 sec/12 sec) and the PTT is abnormal (40 sec/25 sec). What is the most likely cause of the PTT abnormality?

A. Laboratory error

B. Factor VII deficiency

C. Factor IX deficiency

D. Factor XI deficiency

E. Factor XII deficiency

Dr. Cohn: The most likely cause is a sample with insufficient blood in the tube. The test wasn’t indicated in the first place, but now it must be done again.

Question 4.3: The PTT is repeated and remains abnormal: 42 sec/25 sec. Mixing studies correct the abnormality to 29 sec/25 sec. Based on this information, what is the most likely cause of the PTT abnormality?

A. Laboratory error

B. Lupus anticoagulant

C. Prekallikrein factor deficiency

D. Factor XII deficiency

Dr. Cohn: This is not a case of lupus anticoagulant because the abnormal PTT was corrected by the mixing study. Causes of a prolonged PTT include deficiencies of factors XII, XI, and IX, so factor XII deficiency is the most likely explanation, though a deficiency higher up the coagulation cascade (ie, prekallikrein factor deficiency) is possible. In the absence of any personal or family bleeding history, it is unlikely to be a deficiency of factors VII or IX (the hemophiliac) or of factor XI, so a deficiency of factor XII or one of the prekallikrein factors is more likely.

Dr. Sweitzer: A mixing study is indeed the appropriate first step. It is ordered from the lab and involves mixing the patient’s blood with normal plasma and incubating the mixture. If the mixture corrects the PTT result, as was the case with this patient, it indicates a coagulation factor deficiency in the patient’s blood; if it doesn’t correct, that should prompt evaluation for lupus anticoagulant or the presence of some other protein or hormone that’s prolonging the PTT.

Question 4.4: How would you manage this patient perioperatively?

A. Fresh frozen plasma

B. Platelet transfusion

C. Cryoprecipitate

D. Factor VII

E. No treatment necessary

Dr. Cohn: No treatment is necessary. Factor XII deficiency does not cause bleeding, regardless of the PTT. Factor XI deficiency is associated with bleeding, but usually there is a family history or a personal history of bleeding with surgery.

Screening coagulation studies are not usually indicated in a patient without a personal or family history of bleeding, liver disease, alcohol or drug use, or current anticoagulant therapy. Such studies are usually normal in such patients, and when they are not, it’s usually because of a lab error or a disease (hypercoagulable state) or factor deficiency that does not cause bleeding

Dr. Sweitzer: However, if the PTT is prolonged, the cause should be identified, because if the patient is sent to the operating room without an explanation for the prolongation, the perioperative team might think the patient has a bleeding problem and use fresh frozen plasma too readily. Fresh frozen plasma is not appropriate for everyone and may actually make a potentially hypercoagulable state worse.

 

 

DISCUSSION

Question from the audience: It was said that use of ACE inhibitors and ARBs should be avoided around the time of surgery. I’ve done an extensive literature search and found minimal to no evidence to support this practice. To the contrary, I found fairly good evidence to indicate that heart failure can be exacerbated significantly and acutely, as early as within 24 hours, when patients are taken off their ACE inhibitor or ARB. I would like your viewpoint on this basic pathology in perioperative medicine.

Dr. Cohn: The literature on the use of ACE inhibitors or ARBs prior to noncardiac surgery consists of five studies with fewer than 500 patients in total, as recently reviewed by Rosenman et al.13 Although there was no excess of death or MI associated with taking these medications on the morning of surgery, they did increase the need for fluid and pressors.

Dr. Sweitzer: Patients with hypertension have bigger variations of blood pressure, both hypo- and hypertension, in the perioperative period. For this reason, it was standard of care 30 years ago to stop all antihypertensive drugs, including beta-blockers, preoperatively. We soon found that although this practice prevented many episodes of hypotension, it increased the occurrence of perioperative hypertension and the likelihood of cardiac events. It then became standard of care to always continue antihypertensive drugs on the morning of surgery. In the late 1980s and early 1990s, several studies showed that ACE inhibitors and ARBs were associated with a more profound drop in blood pressure upon induction of general anesthesia compared with other antihypertensives.

The usual ways we treat drops in blood pressure—with phenylephrine and ephedrine—are not very effective in treating hypotension associated with general anesthesia in patients taking ACE inhibitors or ARBs. Vasopressin is effective in treating refractory hypotension during surgery, but anesthesiologists don’t use it often. Reducing the doses of induction agents is another means of attenuating the hypotension induced by ACE inhibitors and ARBs.

We should not routinely stop ACE inhibitors and ARBs on the day of surgery, particularly in patients being treated for heart failure, angina, or a prior MI. My bias is to selectively hold ACE inhibitors and ARBs on the morning of surgery in patients who are undergoing a significant operation with a high likelihood of hypotension, have well-controlled preoperative blood pressure, are taking multiple antihypertensive agents, and do not have heart failure. Otherwise, patients should continue their ACE inhibitors and ARBs on the morning of surgery, and the anesthesiologist should be prepared for significant hypotension upon induction of anesthesia, alter anesthesia induction doses accordingly, have vasopressin handy, and avoid the temptation to treat hypotension with fluids or repeated doses of phenylephrine and ephedrine. The previous comment about concerns with ACE inhibitors and ARBs was in the context of initiating new therapies in the immediate preoperative period.

Question from the audience: Urinalysis is ordered for many patients undergoing orthopedic surgery, and invariably some bacteriuria is found. Can you comment on the value of urinalysis and subsequent treatment of abnormal results?

Dr. Cohn: I believe you should never order a urinalysis in an asymptomatic patient, with the exception of patients undergoing procedures that involve genitourinary or gynecologic instrumentation. Ordering a urinalysis before joint replacement has been promoted in the orthopedic literature on the theoretical grounds that bacteria might somehow seed and colonize the joint. Orthopedic surgeons like to do it, but I disregard their requests for it.

Dr. Sweitzer: One study showed that we’d need to spend $1.5 million on screening urinalysis for asymptomatic patients scheduled for joint replacement surgery in order to prevent one joint infection.14

Dr. Cohn: Also, patients are going to get their one dose of cephalosporin before surgery anyway, and that will probably knock out any bacteria that would be found on urinalysis.

Question from the audience: Can you clarify how the 2007 ACC/AHA perioperative guidelines define an active cardiac condition? The patient in your third case report had class III angina, or angina with less than usual activities, but nothing was presented to suggest that his symptoms were unstable. I would suggest that despite his class III symptoms, his angina was stable, and I would have continued down the algorithm rather than defining his cardiac condition as active and considering an intervention.

Dr. Cohn: An active cardiac condition is defined by the ACC as unstable coronary syndromes, which include acute (within the prior 7 days) or recent (within the prior 30 days) MI, unstable angina, and severe (class III or IV) angina.

References
  1. Kearon C, Kahn SR, Agnelli G, Goldhaber S, Raskob GE, Comerota AJ. Antithrombotic therapy for venous thromboembolic disease. American College of Chest Physicians Evidence-Based Clinical Practice Guidelines (8th edition). Chest 2008; 133(6 suppl):454S–545S.
  2. Geerts WH, Bergqvist D, Pineo GF, et al. Prevention of venous thromboembolism: American College of Chest Physicians Evidence-Based Clinical Practice Guidelines (8th edition). Chest 2008; 133(6 suppl):381S–453S.
  3. Kearon C, Hirsh J. Management of anticoagulation before and after elective surgery. N Engl J Med 1997; 336:1506–1511.
  4. Douketis JD, Berger PB, Dunn AS, et al. The perioperative management of antithrombotic therapy: American College of Chest Physicians Evidence-Based Clinical Practice Guidelines (8th edition). Chest 2008; 133(6 suppl):299S–339S.
  5. Horlocker TT, Wedel DJ, Benzon H, et al. Regional anesthesia in the anticoagulated patient: defining the risks (the second ASRA Consensus Conference on Neuraxial Anesthesia and Anticoagulation). Regional Anesthesia & Pain Medicine. 2003; 28:172–197. Available at: http://www.asra.com/consensus-statements/2.html. Accessed May 11, 2009.
  6. Salpeter S, Gryeber E, Pasternak G, Salpeter E. Risk of fatal and nonfatal lactic acidosis with metformin use in type 2 diabetes mellitus. Cochrane Syst Rev 2006; (1):CD002967.
  7. Duncan AI, Koch CG, Xu M, et al.  Recent metformin ingestion does not increase in-hospital morbidity or mortality after cardiac surgery. Anesth Analg 2007; 104:42–50.
  8. Kapoor AS, Kanji H, Buckingham J, Devereaux PJ, McAlister FA. Strength of evidence for perioperative use of statins to reduce cardiovascular risk: systematic review of controlled studies. BMJ 2006; 333:1149.
  9. Poldermans D. Fluvastatin XL use is associated with improved cardiac outcome after major vascular surgery: results from a randomized placebo controlled trial. Presented at: European Society of Cardiology Congress 2008; September 1, 2008; Munich, Germany.
  10. Fleisher LA, Beckman JA, Brown KA, et al. ACC/AHA 2007 guidelines on perioperative cardiovascular evaluation and care for noncardiac surgery. J Am Coll Cardiol 2007; 50:e159–e242.
  11. McFalls EO, Ward HB, Moritz TE, et al. Coronary-artery revascularization before elective major vascular surgery. N Engl J Med 2004; 351:2795–2804.
  12. Grines CL, Bonow RO, Casey DE Jr, et al. Prevention of premature discontinuation of dual antiplatelet therapy in patients with coronary artery stents: a science advisory from the American Heart Association, American College of Cardiology, Society for Cardiovascular Angiography and Interventions, American College of Surgeons, and American Dental Association, with representation from the American College of Physicians. Circulation 2007; 115:813–818.
  13. Rosenman DJ, McDonald FS, Ebbert JO, Erwin PJ, LaBella M, Montori VM. Clinical consequences of withholding versus administering renin-agiotensin-aldosterone system antagonists in the preoperative period. J Hosp Med 2008; 3:319–325.
  14. Lawrence VA, Gafni A, Gross M. The unproven utility of the preoperative urinalysis: economic evaluation. J Clin Epidemiol 1989; 42:1185–1192.
References
  1. Kearon C, Kahn SR, Agnelli G, Goldhaber S, Raskob GE, Comerota AJ. Antithrombotic therapy for venous thromboembolic disease. American College of Chest Physicians Evidence-Based Clinical Practice Guidelines (8th edition). Chest 2008; 133(6 suppl):454S–545S.
  2. Geerts WH, Bergqvist D, Pineo GF, et al. Prevention of venous thromboembolism: American College of Chest Physicians Evidence-Based Clinical Practice Guidelines (8th edition). Chest 2008; 133(6 suppl):381S–453S.
  3. Kearon C, Hirsh J. Management of anticoagulation before and after elective surgery. N Engl J Med 1997; 336:1506–1511.
  4. Douketis JD, Berger PB, Dunn AS, et al. The perioperative management of antithrombotic therapy: American College of Chest Physicians Evidence-Based Clinical Practice Guidelines (8th edition). Chest 2008; 133(6 suppl):299S–339S.
  5. Horlocker TT, Wedel DJ, Benzon H, et al. Regional anesthesia in the anticoagulated patient: defining the risks (the second ASRA Consensus Conference on Neuraxial Anesthesia and Anticoagulation). Regional Anesthesia & Pain Medicine. 2003; 28:172–197. Available at: http://www.asra.com/consensus-statements/2.html. Accessed May 11, 2009.
  6. Salpeter S, Gryeber E, Pasternak G, Salpeter E. Risk of fatal and nonfatal lactic acidosis with metformin use in type 2 diabetes mellitus. Cochrane Syst Rev 2006; (1):CD002967.
  7. Duncan AI, Koch CG, Xu M, et al.  Recent metformin ingestion does not increase in-hospital morbidity or mortality after cardiac surgery. Anesth Analg 2007; 104:42–50.
  8. Kapoor AS, Kanji H, Buckingham J, Devereaux PJ, McAlister FA. Strength of evidence for perioperative use of statins to reduce cardiovascular risk: systematic review of controlled studies. BMJ 2006; 333:1149.
  9. Poldermans D. Fluvastatin XL use is associated with improved cardiac outcome after major vascular surgery: results from a randomized placebo controlled trial. Presented at: European Society of Cardiology Congress 2008; September 1, 2008; Munich, Germany.
  10. Fleisher LA, Beckman JA, Brown KA, et al. ACC/AHA 2007 guidelines on perioperative cardiovascular evaluation and care for noncardiac surgery. J Am Coll Cardiol 2007; 50:e159–e242.
  11. McFalls EO, Ward HB, Moritz TE, et al. Coronary-artery revascularization before elective major vascular surgery. N Engl J Med 2004; 351:2795–2804.
  12. Grines CL, Bonow RO, Casey DE Jr, et al. Prevention of premature discontinuation of dual antiplatelet therapy in patients with coronary artery stents: a science advisory from the American Heart Association, American College of Cardiology, Society for Cardiovascular Angiography and Interventions, American College of Surgeons, and American Dental Association, with representation from the American College of Physicians. Circulation 2007; 115:813–818.
  13. Rosenman DJ, McDonald FS, Ebbert JO, Erwin PJ, LaBella M, Montori VM. Clinical consequences of withholding versus administering renin-agiotensin-aldosterone system antagonists in the preoperative period. J Hosp Med 2008; 3:319–325.
  14. Lawrence VA, Gafni A, Gross M. The unproven utility of the preoperative urinalysis: economic evaluation. J Clin Epidemiol 1989; 42:1185–1192.
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Nuts and bolts of preoperative clinics: The view from three institutions

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Nuts and bolts of preoperative clinics: The view from three institutions

Weiner Center for Preoperative Evaluation at Brigham and Women’s Hospital

By Angela M. Bader, MD, MPH

When organizing our preoperative clinic at Brigham and Women’s Hospital, we had several goals. Overall, we wanted a standardized process to help us achieve a high level of excellence. We hoped that creating a new system would eliminate ambiguity about who was responsible for following up on a patient’s abnormal laboratory test result—the surgeon, anesthesiologist, or primary care physician. We also wanted to better coordinate the various care teams involved throughout the perioperative period.

STANDARDIZATION HELPS MEET MANY GOALS

Standardization can occur at many levels:

  • Performance of assessments and testing
  • Organization of the patient chart and medical records
  • Systems checks throughout the process to ensure that nothing is missed
  • Team-to-team communication.

Documentation requirements apply regardless of institutional structure

When considering any system of preoperative assessment, keep in mind that the hospital must meet and appropriately document compliance with all regulatory, accreditation, and payer requirements and guidelines, such as those of the Joint Commission, the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS), and the National Surgical Quality Improvement Program. For example, the Joint Commission requires that a surgical history and physical examination be done within 30 days of a procedure. An anesthesiology assessment and a nursing assessment are also required. All of these assessments have mandatory elements, including documenting “never events” and ordering appropriate laboratory tests, electrocardiograms (ECGs), and radiographs.

Sometimes administrators of other hospitals say to me, “We can’t afford a preoperative clinic, and we don’t need one.” My response is that regardless of whether a hospital has a preoperative clinic, the regulatory requirements and guidelines must be met: it is not an issue of avoiding certain steps. Having a dedicated preoperative clinic simply shifts the work to a standardized, centralized system and avoids delaying these required steps until the day of surgery, when taking care of a problem involves the most inefficient use of resources.

Tailor system to institutional needs and characteristics

Within the regulatory framework, the organizational scheme of every institution must address issues of volume and acuity, the types of surgery performed, and the time frames required. A system must be able to deal with the preoperative needs of patients undergoing operations that are booked weeks in advance (often the case for ortho­pedic surgery) as well as those that may not be booked until a day before the procedure (eg, cancer surgery).

Our plan was developed for our very high-volume, tertiary care institution. In 2008, 24,000 patients used our clinic (roughly 100 patients per day).

DESIGN OF THE PREOPERATIVE CLINIC

A nurse practitioner–based model for ‘one-stop shopping’

We decided that the clinic should offer all elements of the preoperative assessment and thereby give patients “one-stop shopping.” Each patient sees a nurse practitioner, who performs the surgical history and physical examination as well as the anesthesiology and nursing assessments. The result is a multidisciplinary approach with a single assessment output. We shifted employees who had been responsible for preoperative assessment in the offices of various surgeons to a central clinic so that all assessments could be standardized, and we provided additional training to enable them to perform various assessments. The nurse practitioners are supervised by an on-site attending physician, as detailed below.

This model offers a number of advantages:

  • Patients see a single provider.
  • Assessment is facilitated for our surgeons, who may not be completely up-to-date on perioperative risk assessment and management.
  • We have a central location for standardized education programs for our physicians, nurses, and residents.
  • The clinic’s standardized records and processes facilitate data generation for research and clinical practice improvement.

Independent budgetary and staffing structure

The preoperative clinic is a separate cost center under the leadership of the department of anesthesiology. Resources were shifted to a central location so that as volume increases, we can add resources to meet the additional volume. We contracted with the hospital administration to provide payment for two full-time-equivalent anesthesiologists per day, who serve as on-site attending physicians. The hospital is willing to do this because not only do these attending physicians supervise the anesthesiology assessment, they are the collaborating physicians for the entire perioperative assessment. They review every patient, order tests and write prescriptions as needed, and discuss issues with the primary care physicians and referring specialists.

The preoperative clinic has an anesthesiologist director (me) who reports directly to the hospital’s vice president for surgical services on budget and staffing issues. I also report to the chairman of the department of anesthesiology, though he is not involved in budgetary functions (the hospital contracts with him to provide the anesthesiology staffing). The clerical and nursing staff work directly for the clinic.

The clinic is run in a self-contained area with a central waiting room and space for doing all the assessments and laboratory work internally, including 16 examination rooms and a room for chart organization.

 

 

MORE BENEFITS OF STANDARDIZATION

Standardized scheduling ensures reliability

The secretaries in each surgeon’s office schedule appointments through a central computer system after registration and insurance precertification. Our computer system does not allow an operation to be scheduled without an evaluation also being scheduled. The evaluation can involve either a visit or a telephone screen; we provide algorithms so that the surgeons’ secretaries know which is required. This system has substantially reduced the number of walk-ins, allowing for a more even distribution of patients and ensuring that medical records will be available when a patient is seen.

We watch our schedule carefully. Our computer system monitors the time that each patient is in our clinic to determine his or her waiting time and assessment time. It takes about 75 minutes to go through the whole process, including the time for a nurse practitioner to do the surgical history and physical examination and the anesthesiology and nursing assessments, a laboratory technician to do an ECG and laboratory tests if indicated, and completion of all required documentation. Accordingly, patients are scheduled in 75-minute blocks between 7:00 am and 6:30 pm. We do not have evening or weekend hours because of the difficulty of contacting surgeons and primary care physicians when questions arise. It is simply not cost-effective to have to do that type of follow-up on a case after the patient leaves.

Only about 10% of our patients are screened by telephone, since most of our operations are complicated and require in-person assessment (most low-acuity procedures are done at other hospitals). Of the patients who visit the preoperative clinic, about 75% undergo the single assessment model for surgery, anesthesiology, and nursing as described above. The remaining 25% of patients have their history and physical exam completed outside Brigham and Women’s Hospital for insurance reasons; the remainder of their assessment is conducted in our preoperative clinic by a registered nurse and an anesthesiology resident.

Multiple systems checks

Our model also incorporates standardization in the form of multiple systems checks:

  • Case presentation. Every case is presented to an attending anesthesiologist, who reviews the ECG (if ordered) before the patient leaves the clinic.
  • Post-visit chart check. A registered nurse or nurse practitioner signs off on each chart after the visit, confirming test results and resolution of all paperwork issues.
  • Surgical checklist. The end result is a checklist that serves as the front sheet of the operating room chart.

Our ability to use this system of checks to get the chart completed comprehensively and reliably and deliver it to the operating room when needed was key to securing institutional support and funding for the preoperative clinic.

ROLE OF THE ATTENDING ANESTHESIOLOGISTS

Two full-time attending anesthesiologists are present in the preoperative clinic each day. One is responsible largely for supervising the nurse practitioner assessments and reviewing case presentations, while the other also oversees the education and supervision of residents. Residents rotate through the clinic for 2 weeks (one or two at a time) and have a designated curriculum consisting of daily lectures and competencies in preoperative evaluation.

Because our anesthesiologists are expert in pre­operative assessment, we require very few outside consults. We can communicate directly with the cardiologists and other physicians and order tests when indicated. We have a clerical assistant who obtains all necessary paperwork and prior testing from outside providers so that the clinicians need not waste time on this.

A GROWING CHALLENGE: ASSESSMENT FOR PROCEDURES IN AMBULATORY SETTINGS

Looking forward, a rapidly growing challenge facing our clinic stems from the tremendous growth in patients who require anesthesia for procedures performed outside the operating room. In these situations, the proceduralists need a system for deciding whether an anesthesiologist must be present for any given case.

We have started to develop appropriate screening processes to ensure that the proceduralists in multiple departments know which patients to refer for pre­procedure assessment. We hope to soon develop protocols for high-risk patients and for various procedures such as implanting a pacemaker or defibrillator, catheter procedures, interventional radiology, and endoscopy.

 

 

Anesthesia Perioperative Medicine Clinic at University of Chicago

By BobbieJean Sweitzer, MD

Detsky and Naglie have argued that the costs and clinical outcomes associated with any intervention must be compared with those of alternate strategies for treating the same patients,1 and I believe their point applies well to preoperative clinics. Although certain requirements of the Joint Commission and CMS must be met, as noted by Dr. Bader, they can be met in various ways. I will preface my comments by emphasizing that one size does not fit all: every institution must decide the best approach to preoperative assessment based on its patient population, the types of procedures it performs, and the volume it handles. 

TRIAGE STREAMLINES THE PROCESS

Our preoperative clinic at the University of Chicago emphasizes triage. Not every patient should have to go to the trouble of coming in to see a provider. In the future, we will likely see more “virtual” preoperative assessments using devices in development, such as handheld ultrasonography machines. Just as patients can have their pacemakers and implantable cardiac defibrillators remotely checked via phone contact, more tools will one day be available for remote assessment.

Although not every surgical patient needs to come in to the preoperative clinic, every patient must have a physical examination. All patients will be seen on the day of surgery, so in some cases the physical exam may be able to wait until then. For example, an airway assessment need not be done ahead of time. Most anesthesiologists are prepared to manage airways on very short notice, so extensive advance planning is not always necessary.

Obtain basic info by questionnaire to save staff time

Information about the patient is key to triage, and it may be either paper- or computer-based. An initial priority should be to develop some mechanism for getting information from patients before the day of their procedure without a visit to the hospital or ambulatory surgery center.

We use a two-page paper questionnaire to obtain basic information from patients, including (among other pertinent questions) age, planned operation, names of the surgeon and primary doctor, past operations and medical history, allergies, a list of medications, social history (drug, alcohol, tobacco use), whether they have ever taken steroids, whether they have high blood pressure, and whether they can comfortably walk up a flight of stairs. We provide the primary care physicians and surgeons with blank questionnaires, which their patients can fill out in their waiting rooms or take home and fax to us (or drop off) later. The questionnaire gives us a good deal of essential information without using staff time.

Various computer-based and Web-based systems are also available for collecting basic patient information. Smaller institutions need not purchase an entire electronic medical record system, which can be very expensive. Some Web-based tools operate on a pay-per-use basis and can be very helpful.

Review the information to guide triage

We then review the patient information to determine the extent of preoperative evaluation required. Some patients, especially those scheduled at an ambulatory surgery center, are healthy enough that they can just come in on the day of surgery for an examination and an update of their information. Others will need an appointment at the clinic before the day of surgery for more extensive preoperative evaluation. For other patients, review of their questionnaire responses may prompt a phone call or e-mail from the clinic for more information to determine whether a day-of-surgery exam will suffice or whether evaluation in advance is needed. When in doubt, concerns raised by the questionnaire should be explored before the day of surgery to avoid surprises and allow sufficient time for a consultation, if needed.

STANDARDIZED GUIDELINES KEEP CARE CONSISTENT

We encourage our staff to minimize preoperative testing and ECGs. A majority of diagnoses are made based on the history and physical exam.2 Generally, a test should confirm what is already suspected and merely provide objective evidence when needed. Testing in this setting should not be done to “find out what is wrong” with a patient.

It is helpful to develop standardized guidelines for preoperative assessment and make them available to everyone in the institution via the Web. The guidelines should address recommended preoperative tests and management practices according to specific patient conditions or surgical procedures. The clear objective is to avoid disagreement about what a patient needs between the provider who evaluated the patient in advance and the surgeon or anesthesiologist who evaluates the patient on the day of surgery.

Our guidelines at the University of Chicago include recommendations for patients on long-term anticoagulant therapy, for patients with coronary stents, for medications that should be discontinued (and those that may be continued) on the day of surgery, and for numerous other conditions and issues. Our testing guidelines list indicated tests for various medical problems, which in turn link to other guidelines. Other links are based on the medications a patient is using or the type of operation that is planned.

We collaborated with our electrophysiology department to create guidelines for managing patients with pacemakers and defibrillators. Almost every patient with one of these devices has a little card associated with the device, and we ask the surgeons to copy the card and send it to the clinic if we will not be directly seeing the patient. Using a national database, the electro­physiology department can determine from the card the type of pacemaker or defibrillator a patient has, and they fax or e-mail us back a page of instructions to let us know whether the device requires special consideration during surgery, whether it should be checked preoperatively, and whether its battery needs replacing. With this system, we have markedly reduced problems on the day of surgery.

 

 

CONSULTS HAVE AN IMPORTANT ROLE

Consults should never be requested in order to “clear a patient for surgery.” Consult requests should rather address specific issues, such as, “Is this patient medically optimized?” or “Please address this patient’s hypertension.” In turn, consult notes should provide meaningful information that can be used in a specific way. A clearance letter or simple risk assessment is not helpful.

If a patient has not seen a primary care doctor in a long time, a consult request should (in addition to requesting a global risk assessment) specify any particular concerns, such as, “The patient reports snoring; please address sleep apnea and cardiac risk.”

Case study: Beware consult notes with no specifics

Consider a case we encountered of a 54-year-old man who had a preoperative cardiac risk assessment. The cardiology consultant completed a short form consisting of a multiple-choice check-off list indicating low, moderate, or high cardiac risk. The consultant checked that the patient had low cardiac risk but provided no other instructions or information other than his own contact information.

When we reviewed the patient’s questionnaire, we saw that his medications included metoprolol, clopidogrel, and aspirin even though the patient did not mention that he had coronary artery disease. On this basis, we requested details about his cardiac evaluation from his cardiologist. It turned out that the patient had a history of four catheterizations with several cardiac stents placed. The most recent stent was implanted to overlap a previous stent that had been found “floating” in the blood vessel; this last stent was placed just 6 months before the cardiologist issued the consult note indicating “low cardiac risk.”

The moral is to approach consult notes with caution, especially if they offer no specifics. It actually makes me nervous when a note states “low risk” because if something unexpectedly goes wrong in surgery, it appears that the perioperative team took poor care of the patient even if the complication actually may have stemmed from higher-than-recognized underlying patient risk.

PROVIDE, AND REINFORCE, CLEAR INSTRUCTIONS

We give patients written preoperative instructions that become part of our computerized records. We first verbally give explicit instructions for each medication—ie, whether it can be taken as usual or when it needs to be stopped before surgery (and why). Then we provide the same information in writing, after which we try to have the patient repeat the instructions back to the clinician. We include a phone number that patients can call if they need help understanding their preoperative instructions.

Web-based programs also can provide patients online instructions about their medications. Some services even customize information by providing, for example, lists of local surgeons who are willing to allow a patient to continue on aspirin therapy until the day of surgery.

USE THE RIGHT RESOURCES

Staffing

Our model at the University of Chicago relies mainly on residents in training and physician assistants, but advanced nurse practitioners are well suited to a pre­operative clinic as well. These types of providers have background training in history-taking, physical examination, diagnostic testing, and disease management. Registered nurses have more limited abilities, although they may be appropriate for a clinic that deals primarily with healthy patients for whom only history taking and a list of medications is needed. Additionally, our clinic is staffed by one attending anesthesiologist at all times (from among a group of rotating anesthesiologists) as well as medical assistants and clerical staff.

Some clinics perform the surgical history and physical exam at the same time as the anesthesia assessment. I would urge caution with this practice. Just as primary care doctors should not be conducting the anesthesia assessment, nonsurgeons should not be conducting the surgical assessment; doing so puts them out on a limb from a medicolegal standpoint. Advanced nurse practitioners and physician assistants may do surgical assessments under the supervision of a surgeon, but only surgeons should ultimately decide—and document—whether an operation is necessary and what degree of examination is required in advance.

Computer technology for records, messaging, billing

Using electronic medical records and corresponding with colleagues by e-mail make preoperative care much more efficient. We have standardized computer forms for ordering tests and documenting the physical exam. Patients usually understand that electronic medical records are safe and more efficient, and they are often more accepting of their use than practitioners are. Many patients want e-mail access to doctors, to schedule appointments online, and to receive appointment reminders by e-mail.3

Electronic medical records also avoid redundancy. If a patient has been seen in our preoperative clinic and is later scheduled for another surgery (even if a different surgeon is involved), a return visit to our clinic may not be necessary. In some cases, we can send the old work-up stamped “For information only,” which can then be updated by the anesthesiologist on the day of surgery.

A central, standardized process also makes billing more efficient and helps to ensure that payment is received for all services provided. Standardized documentation makes it easier for coders to enter the correct evaluation and management codes and ensures that all required criteria are met.

THE PAYOFF: LIVES AND DOLLARS SAVED

A thorough and efficient preoperative assessment system is cost-effective. Every minute of operating room time is worth $10 to $15,4,5 so delays should be avoided. Everything that is done ahead of time saves money for the whole enterprise by reducing unnecessary case setups and reducing “down time” due to lack of patient, equipment, or staff readiness. We routinely bill for preoperative evaluations when this service goes beyond a routine preoperative assessment based on CMS (and other insurance) requirements. However, a preoperative evaluation is required by CMS and most payers if one wants to be paid for any anesthesia-provided service. As a result, a cost is incurred without offsetting revenue if a case is cancelled on the day of surgery after one performs the anesthesia evaluation.

A study we published a few years ago showed that patients who were seen in our preoperative clinic were significantly less likely to have day-of-surgery cancellations than were patients not seen in our clinic, a finding that applied to both our ambulatory surgery center and our main operating rooms (Table 1).5 These findings held even after adjustment for American Society of Anesthesiologists severity class. In addition, the median delay in surgery start time was significantly less among patients who were seen in the preoperative clinic.

Yesterday I heard someone ask, “Do we really need all this preoperative evaluation? Does it really improve outcomes?” There is some evidence that it does. A study from 2000 based on data from the Australian Incident Monitoring Study found that 11% of the 6,271 critical incidents that occurred following operations were attributable to inadequate preoperative evaluation and that 3% were unequivocally related to problems with preoperative assessment or preparation. More than half of the incidents were deemed preventable.6

Preoperative clinics are good for patients and make good sense economically. We just need to demonstrate to our administrators and to payers that we are offering an excellent service.

 

 

Cleveland Clinic IMPACT Center

By Ajay Kumar, MD

Cleveland Clinic is structured differently from most other institutions in that its surgeons, anesthesiologists, and hospitalists are all direct employees of the institution. Despite this unique structure, many aspects of our preoperative clinic—known as the Internal Medicine Preoperative Assessment, Consultation and Treatment (IMPACT) Center—are applicable to other institutions.

Cleveland Clinic is a busy surgical hospital whose preoperative optimization system is designed to provide high-quality care. The IMPACT Center is consulted for most complicated noncardiac surgery patients, and its referral sources include most of the institution’s surgical specialties.

QUEST FOR A BETTER PATIENT EXPERIENCE

When the IMPACT Center was created in 1997, the aim was to focus on the same objectives highlighted by Drs. Bader and Sweitzer: safety, a positive patient experience, enhanced communication, better continuity of care, effective use of resources, and improving throughput by standardizing care.

A prime motivator was the desire to move away from the tendency for presurgical consults to simply “clear the patient for surgery,” and we have indeed evolved considerably from that point. The focus of our peri­operative care program today is to comprehensively evaluate risk by taking into account patient-, procedure-, and anesthesia-related factors.

We offer “one-stop shopping,” and our priority is for efficient throughput. We are located in a 12-story building that includes outpatient, preoperative, and surgical clinics and offices. The IMPACT Center is on the first floor along with the preoperative anesthesia consultation and evaluation (PACE) clinic, the laboratory, and ECG and stress-test labs. Patients can undergo radiographic studies on the second floor.

The patient experience counts for a lot. Many of our patients are from another state or country, so efficiency and convenience are especially important. Patients can usually get all assessment and testing done in a single day.

A TIGHTLY MANAGED PROCESS

A ‘smart’ questionnaire starts the process

Figure 1. Flow chart of the preoperative evaluation process at Cleveland Clinic.
Our process (Figure 1) begins in the surgeons’ offices, where a patient is seen by a surgeon and an operation is deemed necessary. There the patient is asked to fill out a computer-assisted health screening questionnaire available online. The questionnaire is very sophisticated: based on the patient’s answers, it asks further pertinent questions and requests details if the history is complicated. A patient with multiple health problems may take 20 minutes to complete it, while a healthy patient may take only 3 minutes.

A computerized report based on the questionnaire guides the surgical office in scheduling the patient to specific areas according to algorithms. Based on case complexity and clinical needs, patients are scheduled for the IMPACT Center along with the PACE clinic; if needed (based on the algorithms), patients also are scheduled for laboratory tests or imaging. This standardized approach helps create a safe passage for patients through the preoperative process with less confusion.

Patient is given a personalized binder

Once all appointments and tests are scheduled, the patient is given a binder containing specific information about the procedure and preoperative instructions. The medical appointment at the IMPACT Center is usually scheduled before the PACE clinic appointment. Patients receive an itinerary for all preoperative appointments and surgical office appointments before the planned surgery. The itinerary is planned so that if additional testing is requested, it can be accommodated on the same day.

At the end of the preoperative assessment, the patient receives printed information with specific preoperative instructions, including which medications to continue or stop.

Standardized, computer-based medical records

Our systems and processes have undergone a good deal of evolution. We have integrated our medical records and use a standard outside medical record retrieval process. The template for the history and physical exam is standard for all Cleveland Clinic patients and is used for all presurgical assessments before all noncardiac surgeries. The template is comprehensive, including the history of the present illness, the review of systems, the physical exam, and anesthesia-related issues. All outside documents are scanned into our electronic medical record system and are available for viewing prior to surgery from any computer connected to the system.

Our preoperative assessment guidelines are also kept updated at a central online location so that all providers have access to them.

Staff keeps process running efficiently

The IMPACT Center is managed by the department of hospital medicine and supported by at least 5.5 full-time physicians every day. We also have two registered nurses, two assistants who help with scheduling and testing, and three secretaries who support the doctors, obtain records, and make arrangements with outside doctors for testing if a patient wants to return home before our testing can be completed.

A secretary also keeps a log for each patient seen in the clinic, tracking all pending issues. The day before surgery, the secretary contacts the appropriate office for anything that is still pending. If she gets no response, the matter is transferred to one of our doctors so that the problem can be resolved at once. This strategy allows us to achieve a nearly 0% rate of surgery delay or cancellation attributable to unavailable test results.

Our patient volumes have increased significantly since we started in 1997. Last year more than 15,000 patients visited the IMPACT Center and now we have expanded our services to regional hospitals within the Cleveland Clinic Health System.

INTERDEPARTMENTAL COMMUNICATION IS CRITICAL

Interdepartmental communication is a must for patient safety, so we encourage a culture of communication between the hospitalist and the surgical team. The location of most of our surgical clinics within the same building as the IMPACT Center further facilitates communication, as does the proximity of the PACE clinic. Additionally, one of our IMPACT Center physicians is accessible around the clock to answer to our surgeon or anesthesiologist colleagues as needed.

We regularly assess our process and seek feedback from surgeons and anesthesiologists. We also conduct yearly patient experience surveys to make sure we are providing patients with the highest quality of care.

 

 

Discussion

Question from the audience: Our anesthesia assessment department was approached by our surgeons to do both the anesthesia and surgical assessments, but we felt that would put us in a potential legal conflict if a patient who was assessed that way developed problems. Can you comment?

Dr. Bader: Although we do surgical assessments at our preoperative clinic, we don’t make any decisions about whether or not to proceed with an operation. We get an office note from the surgeon that is directed specifically toward the need for surgery, indications for surgery, and surgical consent. We perform the surgical history and physical examination. Our process is essentially the same as when surgeons have a physician assistant do the history and physical examination in their office. Our practitioners are employed by the hospital, so there is no conflict of interest there.

Comment from the audience: I’m a strong believer in hands-on patient contact. Over my 15 years of practice, we have encountered a lot of unexpected problems during the preoperative exam—aortic stenoses, infections, ventricular septal defects—all of which would never have been detected from a screening form.

Dr. Sweitzer: I agree that we pick up many things by seeing the patient in person. I’ve picked up more cases of aortic stenosis as an anesthesiologist in the preoperative clinic than I ever did as an internist, because the population is high-risk. But patients who have such problems tend to have risk factors and be in certain age groups. Studies indicate that the history is more important than the physical exam: the history suggests about 75% of conditions that are present. The physical exam adds only a little more—perhaps another 15%. Our recommendations are very much consistent with the American College of Cardiology and American Heart Association guidelines on preoperative cardiac evaluation.7 It is more important to identify whether a patient has risk factors for coronary artery disease than to find out whether a stress test or ECG is normal. One needs to do a really good history, but it can be done remotely. Based on certain risk factors identified, high-risk patients can be selected who need to come in and have a physical exam.

Question from the audience: Could you elaborate on the electronic medical record system used at the University of Chicago? I’ve heard there’s a steep learning curve when implementing these kinds of systems. They also are very expensive—I’ve heard that some cost $40 to $80 million. Has enhanced revenue flow offset the costs?

Dr. Sweitzer: We have a home-grown system developed with FileMaker Pro by a computer programmer at our institution. It was a lot easier to develop than people tend to think. There are many savvy computer programmers out there; I’ve had medical students assist me with updating it. We’re now considering developing it as a commercial system. Many systems are available for purchase, including Epic, Pyxis, one from General Electric, and many others. They are very expensive, so smaller institutions might want to use a pay-for-service system.

There definitely is a learning curve to switching to electronic medical records, but it is not nearly as steep as many believe. The extra time it takes a clinician to initially make a computer entry rather than write on paper is vastly recouped downstream: the electronic medical record is legible and organized, and it doesn’t get lost or need to be redone. You can bring up a patient record from 6 months before and reuse it as a template.

Dr. Bader: The discussion of cost savings from preoperative clinics usually focuses on savings from avoiding surgery cancellations and delays and from more efficient laboratory testing, but the biggest savings for an institution is better reimbursement through better diagnosis-related groups (DRG) coding. That’s an important reason our institution is funding our clinic. Electronic medical records allow standardization of information so that coders know exactly where to look for the comorbidities and other pertinent information. This increases payments for DRGs, which can be documented for the hospital. This literally runs into millions of dollars a year and more than offsets the costs of the system.

Question from the audience: Dr. Bader, I’m impressed with the number of patients going through your pre­operative clinic. How many patients are seen per nurse practitioner in your clinic?

Dr. Bader: The nurse practitioners have 10-hour shifts and see one patient every 75 minutes. The process of seeing a patient takes a lot less time now than with the old system, in which patients saw an anesthesiologist plus a nurse. Our current system eliminates redundancy: questions need to be asked only once.

Question from the audience: My compliance office says that preoperative assessments for early-morning admission patients are good for only 7 days. Is that true?

Dr. Bader: There are sometimes differences between Joint Commission requirements and those of certain insurance companies. That kind of issue needs to be discussed with your hospital compliance office. We program rules into our scheduling system to accommodate different insurance policies and other requirements so that a patient is not scheduled beyond the allowable period.

References
  1. Detsky AS, Naglie IG. A clinician’s guide to cost-effectiveness analysis. Ann Intern Med 1990; 113:147–154.
  2. Sandler G. The importance of the history in the medical clinic and the cost of unnecessary tests. Am Heart J 1980; 100:928–931.
  3. Blumenthal D, Glaser JP. Information technology comes to medicine. N Engl J Med 2007; 356:2527–2534.
  4. Strum DP, Vargas LG, May JH. Surgical subspecialty block utilization and capacity planning: a minimal cost analysis model. Anesthesiology 1999; 90:1176–1185.
  5. Ferschl MB, Tung A, Sweitzer B, Huo D, Glick DB. Preoperative clinic visits reduce operating room cancellations and delays. Anesthesiology 2005; 103:855–859.
  6. Kluger MT, Tham EJ, Coleman NA, et al. Inadequate preoperative evaluation and preparation: a review of 197 reports from the Australian incident monitoring study. Anaesthesia 2000; 55:1173–1178.
  7. Fleisher LA, Beckman JA, Brown KA, et al. ACC/AHA 2007 guidelines on perioperative cardiovascular evaluation and care for noncardiac surgery: a report of the American College of Cardiology/American Heart Association Task Force on Practice Guidelines. J Am Coll Cardiol 2007; 50:1707–1732.
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Author and Disclosure Information

Angela M. Bader, MD, MPH
Director, Weiner Center for Preoperative Evaluation, Brigham and Women’s Hospital; and Associate Professor of Anaesthesia, Harvard Medical School; Boston, MA

BobbieJean Sweitzer, MD
Director, Anesthesia Perioperative Medicine Clinic; Associate Professor of Medicine; and Associate Professor of Anesthesia and Critical Care, University of Chicago, Chicago, IL

Ajay Kumar, MD
Director, IMPACT Center, Department of Hospital Medicine, Quality and Patient Safety Institute, Cleveland Clinic, Cleveland, OH

Correspondence: Angela M. Bader, MD, MPH, Brigham and Women’s Hospital, Department of Anesthesiology, Perioperative and Pain Medicine, 75 Francis Street, CWN L1, Boston, MA 02115 (abader@partners.org); BobbieJean Sweitzer, MD, Anesthesia Perioperative Medicine Clinic, University of Chicago, 5841 S. Maryland Ave., Chicago, IL 60637 (bsweitzer@dacc.uchicago.edu); Ajay Kumar, MD, Department of Hospital Medicine, Cleveland Clinic, 9500 Euclid Ave., A13, Cleveland, OH 44195 (kumara@ccf.org)

All authors have indicated that they have no financial relationships with commercial interests that have a direct bearing on the subject matter of this article.

This article was developed from an audio transcript of a joint presentation by the authors at the 4th Annual Perioperative Medicine Summit. The transcript was edited by the Cleveland Clinic Journal of Medicine staff for clarity and conciseness, and was then reviewed, revised, and approved by Drs. Bader, Sweitzer, and Kumar.

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Author and Disclosure Information

Angela M. Bader, MD, MPH
Director, Weiner Center for Preoperative Evaluation, Brigham and Women’s Hospital; and Associate Professor of Anaesthesia, Harvard Medical School; Boston, MA

BobbieJean Sweitzer, MD
Director, Anesthesia Perioperative Medicine Clinic; Associate Professor of Medicine; and Associate Professor of Anesthesia and Critical Care, University of Chicago, Chicago, IL

Ajay Kumar, MD
Director, IMPACT Center, Department of Hospital Medicine, Quality and Patient Safety Institute, Cleveland Clinic, Cleveland, OH

Correspondence: Angela M. Bader, MD, MPH, Brigham and Women’s Hospital, Department of Anesthesiology, Perioperative and Pain Medicine, 75 Francis Street, CWN L1, Boston, MA 02115 (abader@partners.org); BobbieJean Sweitzer, MD, Anesthesia Perioperative Medicine Clinic, University of Chicago, 5841 S. Maryland Ave., Chicago, IL 60637 (bsweitzer@dacc.uchicago.edu); Ajay Kumar, MD, Department of Hospital Medicine, Cleveland Clinic, 9500 Euclid Ave., A13, Cleveland, OH 44195 (kumara@ccf.org)

All authors have indicated that they have no financial relationships with commercial interests that have a direct bearing on the subject matter of this article.

This article was developed from an audio transcript of a joint presentation by the authors at the 4th Annual Perioperative Medicine Summit. The transcript was edited by the Cleveland Clinic Journal of Medicine staff for clarity and conciseness, and was then reviewed, revised, and approved by Drs. Bader, Sweitzer, and Kumar.

Author and Disclosure Information

Angela M. Bader, MD, MPH
Director, Weiner Center for Preoperative Evaluation, Brigham and Women’s Hospital; and Associate Professor of Anaesthesia, Harvard Medical School; Boston, MA

BobbieJean Sweitzer, MD
Director, Anesthesia Perioperative Medicine Clinic; Associate Professor of Medicine; and Associate Professor of Anesthesia and Critical Care, University of Chicago, Chicago, IL

Ajay Kumar, MD
Director, IMPACT Center, Department of Hospital Medicine, Quality and Patient Safety Institute, Cleveland Clinic, Cleveland, OH

Correspondence: Angela M. Bader, MD, MPH, Brigham and Women’s Hospital, Department of Anesthesiology, Perioperative and Pain Medicine, 75 Francis Street, CWN L1, Boston, MA 02115 (abader@partners.org); BobbieJean Sweitzer, MD, Anesthesia Perioperative Medicine Clinic, University of Chicago, 5841 S. Maryland Ave., Chicago, IL 60637 (bsweitzer@dacc.uchicago.edu); Ajay Kumar, MD, Department of Hospital Medicine, Cleveland Clinic, 9500 Euclid Ave., A13, Cleveland, OH 44195 (kumara@ccf.org)

All authors have indicated that they have no financial relationships with commercial interests that have a direct bearing on the subject matter of this article.

This article was developed from an audio transcript of a joint presentation by the authors at the 4th Annual Perioperative Medicine Summit. The transcript was edited by the Cleveland Clinic Journal of Medicine staff for clarity and conciseness, and was then reviewed, revised, and approved by Drs. Bader, Sweitzer, and Kumar.

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Weiner Center for Preoperative Evaluation at Brigham and Women’s Hospital

By Angela M. Bader, MD, MPH

When organizing our preoperative clinic at Brigham and Women’s Hospital, we had several goals. Overall, we wanted a standardized process to help us achieve a high level of excellence. We hoped that creating a new system would eliminate ambiguity about who was responsible for following up on a patient’s abnormal laboratory test result—the surgeon, anesthesiologist, or primary care physician. We also wanted to better coordinate the various care teams involved throughout the perioperative period.

STANDARDIZATION HELPS MEET MANY GOALS

Standardization can occur at many levels:

  • Performance of assessments and testing
  • Organization of the patient chart and medical records
  • Systems checks throughout the process to ensure that nothing is missed
  • Team-to-team communication.

Documentation requirements apply regardless of institutional structure

When considering any system of preoperative assessment, keep in mind that the hospital must meet and appropriately document compliance with all regulatory, accreditation, and payer requirements and guidelines, such as those of the Joint Commission, the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS), and the National Surgical Quality Improvement Program. For example, the Joint Commission requires that a surgical history and physical examination be done within 30 days of a procedure. An anesthesiology assessment and a nursing assessment are also required. All of these assessments have mandatory elements, including documenting “never events” and ordering appropriate laboratory tests, electrocardiograms (ECGs), and radiographs.

Sometimes administrators of other hospitals say to me, “We can’t afford a preoperative clinic, and we don’t need one.” My response is that regardless of whether a hospital has a preoperative clinic, the regulatory requirements and guidelines must be met: it is not an issue of avoiding certain steps. Having a dedicated preoperative clinic simply shifts the work to a standardized, centralized system and avoids delaying these required steps until the day of surgery, when taking care of a problem involves the most inefficient use of resources.

Tailor system to institutional needs and characteristics

Within the regulatory framework, the organizational scheme of every institution must address issues of volume and acuity, the types of surgery performed, and the time frames required. A system must be able to deal with the preoperative needs of patients undergoing operations that are booked weeks in advance (often the case for ortho­pedic surgery) as well as those that may not be booked until a day before the procedure (eg, cancer surgery).

Our plan was developed for our very high-volume, tertiary care institution. In 2008, 24,000 patients used our clinic (roughly 100 patients per day).

DESIGN OF THE PREOPERATIVE CLINIC

A nurse practitioner–based model for ‘one-stop shopping’

We decided that the clinic should offer all elements of the preoperative assessment and thereby give patients “one-stop shopping.” Each patient sees a nurse practitioner, who performs the surgical history and physical examination as well as the anesthesiology and nursing assessments. The result is a multidisciplinary approach with a single assessment output. We shifted employees who had been responsible for preoperative assessment in the offices of various surgeons to a central clinic so that all assessments could be standardized, and we provided additional training to enable them to perform various assessments. The nurse practitioners are supervised by an on-site attending physician, as detailed below.

This model offers a number of advantages:

  • Patients see a single provider.
  • Assessment is facilitated for our surgeons, who may not be completely up-to-date on perioperative risk assessment and management.
  • We have a central location for standardized education programs for our physicians, nurses, and residents.
  • The clinic’s standardized records and processes facilitate data generation for research and clinical practice improvement.

Independent budgetary and staffing structure

The preoperative clinic is a separate cost center under the leadership of the department of anesthesiology. Resources were shifted to a central location so that as volume increases, we can add resources to meet the additional volume. We contracted with the hospital administration to provide payment for two full-time-equivalent anesthesiologists per day, who serve as on-site attending physicians. The hospital is willing to do this because not only do these attending physicians supervise the anesthesiology assessment, they are the collaborating physicians for the entire perioperative assessment. They review every patient, order tests and write prescriptions as needed, and discuss issues with the primary care physicians and referring specialists.

The preoperative clinic has an anesthesiologist director (me) who reports directly to the hospital’s vice president for surgical services on budget and staffing issues. I also report to the chairman of the department of anesthesiology, though he is not involved in budgetary functions (the hospital contracts with him to provide the anesthesiology staffing). The clerical and nursing staff work directly for the clinic.

The clinic is run in a self-contained area with a central waiting room and space for doing all the assessments and laboratory work internally, including 16 examination rooms and a room for chart organization.

 

 

MORE BENEFITS OF STANDARDIZATION

Standardized scheduling ensures reliability

The secretaries in each surgeon’s office schedule appointments through a central computer system after registration and insurance precertification. Our computer system does not allow an operation to be scheduled without an evaluation also being scheduled. The evaluation can involve either a visit or a telephone screen; we provide algorithms so that the surgeons’ secretaries know which is required. This system has substantially reduced the number of walk-ins, allowing for a more even distribution of patients and ensuring that medical records will be available when a patient is seen.

We watch our schedule carefully. Our computer system monitors the time that each patient is in our clinic to determine his or her waiting time and assessment time. It takes about 75 minutes to go through the whole process, including the time for a nurse practitioner to do the surgical history and physical examination and the anesthesiology and nursing assessments, a laboratory technician to do an ECG and laboratory tests if indicated, and completion of all required documentation. Accordingly, patients are scheduled in 75-minute blocks between 7:00 am and 6:30 pm. We do not have evening or weekend hours because of the difficulty of contacting surgeons and primary care physicians when questions arise. It is simply not cost-effective to have to do that type of follow-up on a case after the patient leaves.

Only about 10% of our patients are screened by telephone, since most of our operations are complicated and require in-person assessment (most low-acuity procedures are done at other hospitals). Of the patients who visit the preoperative clinic, about 75% undergo the single assessment model for surgery, anesthesiology, and nursing as described above. The remaining 25% of patients have their history and physical exam completed outside Brigham and Women’s Hospital for insurance reasons; the remainder of their assessment is conducted in our preoperative clinic by a registered nurse and an anesthesiology resident.

Multiple systems checks

Our model also incorporates standardization in the form of multiple systems checks:

  • Case presentation. Every case is presented to an attending anesthesiologist, who reviews the ECG (if ordered) before the patient leaves the clinic.
  • Post-visit chart check. A registered nurse or nurse practitioner signs off on each chart after the visit, confirming test results and resolution of all paperwork issues.
  • Surgical checklist. The end result is a checklist that serves as the front sheet of the operating room chart.

Our ability to use this system of checks to get the chart completed comprehensively and reliably and deliver it to the operating room when needed was key to securing institutional support and funding for the preoperative clinic.

ROLE OF THE ATTENDING ANESTHESIOLOGISTS

Two full-time attending anesthesiologists are present in the preoperative clinic each day. One is responsible largely for supervising the nurse practitioner assessments and reviewing case presentations, while the other also oversees the education and supervision of residents. Residents rotate through the clinic for 2 weeks (one or two at a time) and have a designated curriculum consisting of daily lectures and competencies in preoperative evaluation.

Because our anesthesiologists are expert in pre­operative assessment, we require very few outside consults. We can communicate directly with the cardiologists and other physicians and order tests when indicated. We have a clerical assistant who obtains all necessary paperwork and prior testing from outside providers so that the clinicians need not waste time on this.

A GROWING CHALLENGE: ASSESSMENT FOR PROCEDURES IN AMBULATORY SETTINGS

Looking forward, a rapidly growing challenge facing our clinic stems from the tremendous growth in patients who require anesthesia for procedures performed outside the operating room. In these situations, the proceduralists need a system for deciding whether an anesthesiologist must be present for any given case.

We have started to develop appropriate screening processes to ensure that the proceduralists in multiple departments know which patients to refer for pre­procedure assessment. We hope to soon develop protocols for high-risk patients and for various procedures such as implanting a pacemaker or defibrillator, catheter procedures, interventional radiology, and endoscopy.

 

 

Anesthesia Perioperative Medicine Clinic at University of Chicago

By BobbieJean Sweitzer, MD

Detsky and Naglie have argued that the costs and clinical outcomes associated with any intervention must be compared with those of alternate strategies for treating the same patients,1 and I believe their point applies well to preoperative clinics. Although certain requirements of the Joint Commission and CMS must be met, as noted by Dr. Bader, they can be met in various ways. I will preface my comments by emphasizing that one size does not fit all: every institution must decide the best approach to preoperative assessment based on its patient population, the types of procedures it performs, and the volume it handles. 

TRIAGE STREAMLINES THE PROCESS

Our preoperative clinic at the University of Chicago emphasizes triage. Not every patient should have to go to the trouble of coming in to see a provider. In the future, we will likely see more “virtual” preoperative assessments using devices in development, such as handheld ultrasonography machines. Just as patients can have their pacemakers and implantable cardiac defibrillators remotely checked via phone contact, more tools will one day be available for remote assessment.

Although not every surgical patient needs to come in to the preoperative clinic, every patient must have a physical examination. All patients will be seen on the day of surgery, so in some cases the physical exam may be able to wait until then. For example, an airway assessment need not be done ahead of time. Most anesthesiologists are prepared to manage airways on very short notice, so extensive advance planning is not always necessary.

Obtain basic info by questionnaire to save staff time

Information about the patient is key to triage, and it may be either paper- or computer-based. An initial priority should be to develop some mechanism for getting information from patients before the day of their procedure without a visit to the hospital or ambulatory surgery center.

We use a two-page paper questionnaire to obtain basic information from patients, including (among other pertinent questions) age, planned operation, names of the surgeon and primary doctor, past operations and medical history, allergies, a list of medications, social history (drug, alcohol, tobacco use), whether they have ever taken steroids, whether they have high blood pressure, and whether they can comfortably walk up a flight of stairs. We provide the primary care physicians and surgeons with blank questionnaires, which their patients can fill out in their waiting rooms or take home and fax to us (or drop off) later. The questionnaire gives us a good deal of essential information without using staff time.

Various computer-based and Web-based systems are also available for collecting basic patient information. Smaller institutions need not purchase an entire electronic medical record system, which can be very expensive. Some Web-based tools operate on a pay-per-use basis and can be very helpful.

Review the information to guide triage

We then review the patient information to determine the extent of preoperative evaluation required. Some patients, especially those scheduled at an ambulatory surgery center, are healthy enough that they can just come in on the day of surgery for an examination and an update of their information. Others will need an appointment at the clinic before the day of surgery for more extensive preoperative evaluation. For other patients, review of their questionnaire responses may prompt a phone call or e-mail from the clinic for more information to determine whether a day-of-surgery exam will suffice or whether evaluation in advance is needed. When in doubt, concerns raised by the questionnaire should be explored before the day of surgery to avoid surprises and allow sufficient time for a consultation, if needed.

STANDARDIZED GUIDELINES KEEP CARE CONSISTENT

We encourage our staff to minimize preoperative testing and ECGs. A majority of diagnoses are made based on the history and physical exam.2 Generally, a test should confirm what is already suspected and merely provide objective evidence when needed. Testing in this setting should not be done to “find out what is wrong” with a patient.

It is helpful to develop standardized guidelines for preoperative assessment and make them available to everyone in the institution via the Web. The guidelines should address recommended preoperative tests and management practices according to specific patient conditions or surgical procedures. The clear objective is to avoid disagreement about what a patient needs between the provider who evaluated the patient in advance and the surgeon or anesthesiologist who evaluates the patient on the day of surgery.

Our guidelines at the University of Chicago include recommendations for patients on long-term anticoagulant therapy, for patients with coronary stents, for medications that should be discontinued (and those that may be continued) on the day of surgery, and for numerous other conditions and issues. Our testing guidelines list indicated tests for various medical problems, which in turn link to other guidelines. Other links are based on the medications a patient is using or the type of operation that is planned.

We collaborated with our electrophysiology department to create guidelines for managing patients with pacemakers and defibrillators. Almost every patient with one of these devices has a little card associated with the device, and we ask the surgeons to copy the card and send it to the clinic if we will not be directly seeing the patient. Using a national database, the electro­physiology department can determine from the card the type of pacemaker or defibrillator a patient has, and they fax or e-mail us back a page of instructions to let us know whether the device requires special consideration during surgery, whether it should be checked preoperatively, and whether its battery needs replacing. With this system, we have markedly reduced problems on the day of surgery.

 

 

CONSULTS HAVE AN IMPORTANT ROLE

Consults should never be requested in order to “clear a patient for surgery.” Consult requests should rather address specific issues, such as, “Is this patient medically optimized?” or “Please address this patient’s hypertension.” In turn, consult notes should provide meaningful information that can be used in a specific way. A clearance letter or simple risk assessment is not helpful.

If a patient has not seen a primary care doctor in a long time, a consult request should (in addition to requesting a global risk assessment) specify any particular concerns, such as, “The patient reports snoring; please address sleep apnea and cardiac risk.”

Case study: Beware consult notes with no specifics

Consider a case we encountered of a 54-year-old man who had a preoperative cardiac risk assessment. The cardiology consultant completed a short form consisting of a multiple-choice check-off list indicating low, moderate, or high cardiac risk. The consultant checked that the patient had low cardiac risk but provided no other instructions or information other than his own contact information.

When we reviewed the patient’s questionnaire, we saw that his medications included metoprolol, clopidogrel, and aspirin even though the patient did not mention that he had coronary artery disease. On this basis, we requested details about his cardiac evaluation from his cardiologist. It turned out that the patient had a history of four catheterizations with several cardiac stents placed. The most recent stent was implanted to overlap a previous stent that had been found “floating” in the blood vessel; this last stent was placed just 6 months before the cardiologist issued the consult note indicating “low cardiac risk.”

The moral is to approach consult notes with caution, especially if they offer no specifics. It actually makes me nervous when a note states “low risk” because if something unexpectedly goes wrong in surgery, it appears that the perioperative team took poor care of the patient even if the complication actually may have stemmed from higher-than-recognized underlying patient risk.

PROVIDE, AND REINFORCE, CLEAR INSTRUCTIONS

We give patients written preoperative instructions that become part of our computerized records. We first verbally give explicit instructions for each medication—ie, whether it can be taken as usual or when it needs to be stopped before surgery (and why). Then we provide the same information in writing, after which we try to have the patient repeat the instructions back to the clinician. We include a phone number that patients can call if they need help understanding their preoperative instructions.

Web-based programs also can provide patients online instructions about their medications. Some services even customize information by providing, for example, lists of local surgeons who are willing to allow a patient to continue on aspirin therapy until the day of surgery.

USE THE RIGHT RESOURCES

Staffing

Our model at the University of Chicago relies mainly on residents in training and physician assistants, but advanced nurse practitioners are well suited to a pre­operative clinic as well. These types of providers have background training in history-taking, physical examination, diagnostic testing, and disease management. Registered nurses have more limited abilities, although they may be appropriate for a clinic that deals primarily with healthy patients for whom only history taking and a list of medications is needed. Additionally, our clinic is staffed by one attending anesthesiologist at all times (from among a group of rotating anesthesiologists) as well as medical assistants and clerical staff.

Some clinics perform the surgical history and physical exam at the same time as the anesthesia assessment. I would urge caution with this practice. Just as primary care doctors should not be conducting the anesthesia assessment, nonsurgeons should not be conducting the surgical assessment; doing so puts them out on a limb from a medicolegal standpoint. Advanced nurse practitioners and physician assistants may do surgical assessments under the supervision of a surgeon, but only surgeons should ultimately decide—and document—whether an operation is necessary and what degree of examination is required in advance.

Computer technology for records, messaging, billing

Using electronic medical records and corresponding with colleagues by e-mail make preoperative care much more efficient. We have standardized computer forms for ordering tests and documenting the physical exam. Patients usually understand that electronic medical records are safe and more efficient, and they are often more accepting of their use than practitioners are. Many patients want e-mail access to doctors, to schedule appointments online, and to receive appointment reminders by e-mail.3

Electronic medical records also avoid redundancy. If a patient has been seen in our preoperative clinic and is later scheduled for another surgery (even if a different surgeon is involved), a return visit to our clinic may not be necessary. In some cases, we can send the old work-up stamped “For information only,” which can then be updated by the anesthesiologist on the day of surgery.

A central, standardized process also makes billing more efficient and helps to ensure that payment is received for all services provided. Standardized documentation makes it easier for coders to enter the correct evaluation and management codes and ensures that all required criteria are met.

THE PAYOFF: LIVES AND DOLLARS SAVED

A thorough and efficient preoperative assessment system is cost-effective. Every minute of operating room time is worth $10 to $15,4,5 so delays should be avoided. Everything that is done ahead of time saves money for the whole enterprise by reducing unnecessary case setups and reducing “down time” due to lack of patient, equipment, or staff readiness. We routinely bill for preoperative evaluations when this service goes beyond a routine preoperative assessment based on CMS (and other insurance) requirements. However, a preoperative evaluation is required by CMS and most payers if one wants to be paid for any anesthesia-provided service. As a result, a cost is incurred without offsetting revenue if a case is cancelled on the day of surgery after one performs the anesthesia evaluation.

A study we published a few years ago showed that patients who were seen in our preoperative clinic were significantly less likely to have day-of-surgery cancellations than were patients not seen in our clinic, a finding that applied to both our ambulatory surgery center and our main operating rooms (Table 1).5 These findings held even after adjustment for American Society of Anesthesiologists severity class. In addition, the median delay in surgery start time was significantly less among patients who were seen in the preoperative clinic.

Yesterday I heard someone ask, “Do we really need all this preoperative evaluation? Does it really improve outcomes?” There is some evidence that it does. A study from 2000 based on data from the Australian Incident Monitoring Study found that 11% of the 6,271 critical incidents that occurred following operations were attributable to inadequate preoperative evaluation and that 3% were unequivocally related to problems with preoperative assessment or preparation. More than half of the incidents were deemed preventable.6

Preoperative clinics are good for patients and make good sense economically. We just need to demonstrate to our administrators and to payers that we are offering an excellent service.

 

 

Cleveland Clinic IMPACT Center

By Ajay Kumar, MD

Cleveland Clinic is structured differently from most other institutions in that its surgeons, anesthesiologists, and hospitalists are all direct employees of the institution. Despite this unique structure, many aspects of our preoperative clinic—known as the Internal Medicine Preoperative Assessment, Consultation and Treatment (IMPACT) Center—are applicable to other institutions.

Cleveland Clinic is a busy surgical hospital whose preoperative optimization system is designed to provide high-quality care. The IMPACT Center is consulted for most complicated noncardiac surgery patients, and its referral sources include most of the institution’s surgical specialties.

QUEST FOR A BETTER PATIENT EXPERIENCE

When the IMPACT Center was created in 1997, the aim was to focus on the same objectives highlighted by Drs. Bader and Sweitzer: safety, a positive patient experience, enhanced communication, better continuity of care, effective use of resources, and improving throughput by standardizing care.

A prime motivator was the desire to move away from the tendency for presurgical consults to simply “clear the patient for surgery,” and we have indeed evolved considerably from that point. The focus of our peri­operative care program today is to comprehensively evaluate risk by taking into account patient-, procedure-, and anesthesia-related factors.

We offer “one-stop shopping,” and our priority is for efficient throughput. We are located in a 12-story building that includes outpatient, preoperative, and surgical clinics and offices. The IMPACT Center is on the first floor along with the preoperative anesthesia consultation and evaluation (PACE) clinic, the laboratory, and ECG and stress-test labs. Patients can undergo radiographic studies on the second floor.

The patient experience counts for a lot. Many of our patients are from another state or country, so efficiency and convenience are especially important. Patients can usually get all assessment and testing done in a single day.

A TIGHTLY MANAGED PROCESS

A ‘smart’ questionnaire starts the process

Figure 1. Flow chart of the preoperative evaluation process at Cleveland Clinic.
Our process (Figure 1) begins in the surgeons’ offices, where a patient is seen by a surgeon and an operation is deemed necessary. There the patient is asked to fill out a computer-assisted health screening questionnaire available online. The questionnaire is very sophisticated: based on the patient’s answers, it asks further pertinent questions and requests details if the history is complicated. A patient with multiple health problems may take 20 minutes to complete it, while a healthy patient may take only 3 minutes.

A computerized report based on the questionnaire guides the surgical office in scheduling the patient to specific areas according to algorithms. Based on case complexity and clinical needs, patients are scheduled for the IMPACT Center along with the PACE clinic; if needed (based on the algorithms), patients also are scheduled for laboratory tests or imaging. This standardized approach helps create a safe passage for patients through the preoperative process with less confusion.

Patient is given a personalized binder

Once all appointments and tests are scheduled, the patient is given a binder containing specific information about the procedure and preoperative instructions. The medical appointment at the IMPACT Center is usually scheduled before the PACE clinic appointment. Patients receive an itinerary for all preoperative appointments and surgical office appointments before the planned surgery. The itinerary is planned so that if additional testing is requested, it can be accommodated on the same day.

At the end of the preoperative assessment, the patient receives printed information with specific preoperative instructions, including which medications to continue or stop.

Standardized, computer-based medical records

Our systems and processes have undergone a good deal of evolution. We have integrated our medical records and use a standard outside medical record retrieval process. The template for the history and physical exam is standard for all Cleveland Clinic patients and is used for all presurgical assessments before all noncardiac surgeries. The template is comprehensive, including the history of the present illness, the review of systems, the physical exam, and anesthesia-related issues. All outside documents are scanned into our electronic medical record system and are available for viewing prior to surgery from any computer connected to the system.

Our preoperative assessment guidelines are also kept updated at a central online location so that all providers have access to them.

Staff keeps process running efficiently

The IMPACT Center is managed by the department of hospital medicine and supported by at least 5.5 full-time physicians every day. We also have two registered nurses, two assistants who help with scheduling and testing, and three secretaries who support the doctors, obtain records, and make arrangements with outside doctors for testing if a patient wants to return home before our testing can be completed.

A secretary also keeps a log for each patient seen in the clinic, tracking all pending issues. The day before surgery, the secretary contacts the appropriate office for anything that is still pending. If she gets no response, the matter is transferred to one of our doctors so that the problem can be resolved at once. This strategy allows us to achieve a nearly 0% rate of surgery delay or cancellation attributable to unavailable test results.

Our patient volumes have increased significantly since we started in 1997. Last year more than 15,000 patients visited the IMPACT Center and now we have expanded our services to regional hospitals within the Cleveland Clinic Health System.

INTERDEPARTMENTAL COMMUNICATION IS CRITICAL

Interdepartmental communication is a must for patient safety, so we encourage a culture of communication between the hospitalist and the surgical team. The location of most of our surgical clinics within the same building as the IMPACT Center further facilitates communication, as does the proximity of the PACE clinic. Additionally, one of our IMPACT Center physicians is accessible around the clock to answer to our surgeon or anesthesiologist colleagues as needed.

We regularly assess our process and seek feedback from surgeons and anesthesiologists. We also conduct yearly patient experience surveys to make sure we are providing patients with the highest quality of care.

 

 

Discussion

Question from the audience: Our anesthesia assessment department was approached by our surgeons to do both the anesthesia and surgical assessments, but we felt that would put us in a potential legal conflict if a patient who was assessed that way developed problems. Can you comment?

Dr. Bader: Although we do surgical assessments at our preoperative clinic, we don’t make any decisions about whether or not to proceed with an operation. We get an office note from the surgeon that is directed specifically toward the need for surgery, indications for surgery, and surgical consent. We perform the surgical history and physical examination. Our process is essentially the same as when surgeons have a physician assistant do the history and physical examination in their office. Our practitioners are employed by the hospital, so there is no conflict of interest there.

Comment from the audience: I’m a strong believer in hands-on patient contact. Over my 15 years of practice, we have encountered a lot of unexpected problems during the preoperative exam—aortic stenoses, infections, ventricular septal defects—all of which would never have been detected from a screening form.

Dr. Sweitzer: I agree that we pick up many things by seeing the patient in person. I’ve picked up more cases of aortic stenosis as an anesthesiologist in the preoperative clinic than I ever did as an internist, because the population is high-risk. But patients who have such problems tend to have risk factors and be in certain age groups. Studies indicate that the history is more important than the physical exam: the history suggests about 75% of conditions that are present. The physical exam adds only a little more—perhaps another 15%. Our recommendations are very much consistent with the American College of Cardiology and American Heart Association guidelines on preoperative cardiac evaluation.7 It is more important to identify whether a patient has risk factors for coronary artery disease than to find out whether a stress test or ECG is normal. One needs to do a really good history, but it can be done remotely. Based on certain risk factors identified, high-risk patients can be selected who need to come in and have a physical exam.

Question from the audience: Could you elaborate on the electronic medical record system used at the University of Chicago? I’ve heard there’s a steep learning curve when implementing these kinds of systems. They also are very expensive—I’ve heard that some cost $40 to $80 million. Has enhanced revenue flow offset the costs?

Dr. Sweitzer: We have a home-grown system developed with FileMaker Pro by a computer programmer at our institution. It was a lot easier to develop than people tend to think. There are many savvy computer programmers out there; I’ve had medical students assist me with updating it. We’re now considering developing it as a commercial system. Many systems are available for purchase, including Epic, Pyxis, one from General Electric, and many others. They are very expensive, so smaller institutions might want to use a pay-for-service system.

There definitely is a learning curve to switching to electronic medical records, but it is not nearly as steep as many believe. The extra time it takes a clinician to initially make a computer entry rather than write on paper is vastly recouped downstream: the electronic medical record is legible and organized, and it doesn’t get lost or need to be redone. You can bring up a patient record from 6 months before and reuse it as a template.

Dr. Bader: The discussion of cost savings from preoperative clinics usually focuses on savings from avoiding surgery cancellations and delays and from more efficient laboratory testing, but the biggest savings for an institution is better reimbursement through better diagnosis-related groups (DRG) coding. That’s an important reason our institution is funding our clinic. Electronic medical records allow standardization of information so that coders know exactly where to look for the comorbidities and other pertinent information. This increases payments for DRGs, which can be documented for the hospital. This literally runs into millions of dollars a year and more than offsets the costs of the system.

Question from the audience: Dr. Bader, I’m impressed with the number of patients going through your pre­operative clinic. How many patients are seen per nurse practitioner in your clinic?

Dr. Bader: The nurse practitioners have 10-hour shifts and see one patient every 75 minutes. The process of seeing a patient takes a lot less time now than with the old system, in which patients saw an anesthesiologist plus a nurse. Our current system eliminates redundancy: questions need to be asked only once.

Question from the audience: My compliance office says that preoperative assessments for early-morning admission patients are good for only 7 days. Is that true?

Dr. Bader: There are sometimes differences between Joint Commission requirements and those of certain insurance companies. That kind of issue needs to be discussed with your hospital compliance office. We program rules into our scheduling system to accommodate different insurance policies and other requirements so that a patient is not scheduled beyond the allowable period.

Weiner Center for Preoperative Evaluation at Brigham and Women’s Hospital

By Angela M. Bader, MD, MPH

When organizing our preoperative clinic at Brigham and Women’s Hospital, we had several goals. Overall, we wanted a standardized process to help us achieve a high level of excellence. We hoped that creating a new system would eliminate ambiguity about who was responsible for following up on a patient’s abnormal laboratory test result—the surgeon, anesthesiologist, or primary care physician. We also wanted to better coordinate the various care teams involved throughout the perioperative period.

STANDARDIZATION HELPS MEET MANY GOALS

Standardization can occur at many levels:

  • Performance of assessments and testing
  • Organization of the patient chart and medical records
  • Systems checks throughout the process to ensure that nothing is missed
  • Team-to-team communication.

Documentation requirements apply regardless of institutional structure

When considering any system of preoperative assessment, keep in mind that the hospital must meet and appropriately document compliance with all regulatory, accreditation, and payer requirements and guidelines, such as those of the Joint Commission, the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS), and the National Surgical Quality Improvement Program. For example, the Joint Commission requires that a surgical history and physical examination be done within 30 days of a procedure. An anesthesiology assessment and a nursing assessment are also required. All of these assessments have mandatory elements, including documenting “never events” and ordering appropriate laboratory tests, electrocardiograms (ECGs), and radiographs.

Sometimes administrators of other hospitals say to me, “We can’t afford a preoperative clinic, and we don’t need one.” My response is that regardless of whether a hospital has a preoperative clinic, the regulatory requirements and guidelines must be met: it is not an issue of avoiding certain steps. Having a dedicated preoperative clinic simply shifts the work to a standardized, centralized system and avoids delaying these required steps until the day of surgery, when taking care of a problem involves the most inefficient use of resources.

Tailor system to institutional needs and characteristics

Within the regulatory framework, the organizational scheme of every institution must address issues of volume and acuity, the types of surgery performed, and the time frames required. A system must be able to deal with the preoperative needs of patients undergoing operations that are booked weeks in advance (often the case for ortho­pedic surgery) as well as those that may not be booked until a day before the procedure (eg, cancer surgery).

Our plan was developed for our very high-volume, tertiary care institution. In 2008, 24,000 patients used our clinic (roughly 100 patients per day).

DESIGN OF THE PREOPERATIVE CLINIC

A nurse practitioner–based model for ‘one-stop shopping’

We decided that the clinic should offer all elements of the preoperative assessment and thereby give patients “one-stop shopping.” Each patient sees a nurse practitioner, who performs the surgical history and physical examination as well as the anesthesiology and nursing assessments. The result is a multidisciplinary approach with a single assessment output. We shifted employees who had been responsible for preoperative assessment in the offices of various surgeons to a central clinic so that all assessments could be standardized, and we provided additional training to enable them to perform various assessments. The nurse practitioners are supervised by an on-site attending physician, as detailed below.

This model offers a number of advantages:

  • Patients see a single provider.
  • Assessment is facilitated for our surgeons, who may not be completely up-to-date on perioperative risk assessment and management.
  • We have a central location for standardized education programs for our physicians, nurses, and residents.
  • The clinic’s standardized records and processes facilitate data generation for research and clinical practice improvement.

Independent budgetary and staffing structure

The preoperative clinic is a separate cost center under the leadership of the department of anesthesiology. Resources were shifted to a central location so that as volume increases, we can add resources to meet the additional volume. We contracted with the hospital administration to provide payment for two full-time-equivalent anesthesiologists per day, who serve as on-site attending physicians. The hospital is willing to do this because not only do these attending physicians supervise the anesthesiology assessment, they are the collaborating physicians for the entire perioperative assessment. They review every patient, order tests and write prescriptions as needed, and discuss issues with the primary care physicians and referring specialists.

The preoperative clinic has an anesthesiologist director (me) who reports directly to the hospital’s vice president for surgical services on budget and staffing issues. I also report to the chairman of the department of anesthesiology, though he is not involved in budgetary functions (the hospital contracts with him to provide the anesthesiology staffing). The clerical and nursing staff work directly for the clinic.

The clinic is run in a self-contained area with a central waiting room and space for doing all the assessments and laboratory work internally, including 16 examination rooms and a room for chart organization.

 

 

MORE BENEFITS OF STANDARDIZATION

Standardized scheduling ensures reliability

The secretaries in each surgeon’s office schedule appointments through a central computer system after registration and insurance precertification. Our computer system does not allow an operation to be scheduled without an evaluation also being scheduled. The evaluation can involve either a visit or a telephone screen; we provide algorithms so that the surgeons’ secretaries know which is required. This system has substantially reduced the number of walk-ins, allowing for a more even distribution of patients and ensuring that medical records will be available when a patient is seen.

We watch our schedule carefully. Our computer system monitors the time that each patient is in our clinic to determine his or her waiting time and assessment time. It takes about 75 minutes to go through the whole process, including the time for a nurse practitioner to do the surgical history and physical examination and the anesthesiology and nursing assessments, a laboratory technician to do an ECG and laboratory tests if indicated, and completion of all required documentation. Accordingly, patients are scheduled in 75-minute blocks between 7:00 am and 6:30 pm. We do not have evening or weekend hours because of the difficulty of contacting surgeons and primary care physicians when questions arise. It is simply not cost-effective to have to do that type of follow-up on a case after the patient leaves.

Only about 10% of our patients are screened by telephone, since most of our operations are complicated and require in-person assessment (most low-acuity procedures are done at other hospitals). Of the patients who visit the preoperative clinic, about 75% undergo the single assessment model for surgery, anesthesiology, and nursing as described above. The remaining 25% of patients have their history and physical exam completed outside Brigham and Women’s Hospital for insurance reasons; the remainder of their assessment is conducted in our preoperative clinic by a registered nurse and an anesthesiology resident.

Multiple systems checks

Our model also incorporates standardization in the form of multiple systems checks:

  • Case presentation. Every case is presented to an attending anesthesiologist, who reviews the ECG (if ordered) before the patient leaves the clinic.
  • Post-visit chart check. A registered nurse or nurse practitioner signs off on each chart after the visit, confirming test results and resolution of all paperwork issues.
  • Surgical checklist. The end result is a checklist that serves as the front sheet of the operating room chart.

Our ability to use this system of checks to get the chart completed comprehensively and reliably and deliver it to the operating room when needed was key to securing institutional support and funding for the preoperative clinic.

ROLE OF THE ATTENDING ANESTHESIOLOGISTS

Two full-time attending anesthesiologists are present in the preoperative clinic each day. One is responsible largely for supervising the nurse practitioner assessments and reviewing case presentations, while the other also oversees the education and supervision of residents. Residents rotate through the clinic for 2 weeks (one or two at a time) and have a designated curriculum consisting of daily lectures and competencies in preoperative evaluation.

Because our anesthesiologists are expert in pre­operative assessment, we require very few outside consults. We can communicate directly with the cardiologists and other physicians and order tests when indicated. We have a clerical assistant who obtains all necessary paperwork and prior testing from outside providers so that the clinicians need not waste time on this.

A GROWING CHALLENGE: ASSESSMENT FOR PROCEDURES IN AMBULATORY SETTINGS

Looking forward, a rapidly growing challenge facing our clinic stems from the tremendous growth in patients who require anesthesia for procedures performed outside the operating room. In these situations, the proceduralists need a system for deciding whether an anesthesiologist must be present for any given case.

We have started to develop appropriate screening processes to ensure that the proceduralists in multiple departments know which patients to refer for pre­procedure assessment. We hope to soon develop protocols for high-risk patients and for various procedures such as implanting a pacemaker or defibrillator, catheter procedures, interventional radiology, and endoscopy.

 

 

Anesthesia Perioperative Medicine Clinic at University of Chicago

By BobbieJean Sweitzer, MD

Detsky and Naglie have argued that the costs and clinical outcomes associated with any intervention must be compared with those of alternate strategies for treating the same patients,1 and I believe their point applies well to preoperative clinics. Although certain requirements of the Joint Commission and CMS must be met, as noted by Dr. Bader, they can be met in various ways. I will preface my comments by emphasizing that one size does not fit all: every institution must decide the best approach to preoperative assessment based on its patient population, the types of procedures it performs, and the volume it handles. 

TRIAGE STREAMLINES THE PROCESS

Our preoperative clinic at the University of Chicago emphasizes triage. Not every patient should have to go to the trouble of coming in to see a provider. In the future, we will likely see more “virtual” preoperative assessments using devices in development, such as handheld ultrasonography machines. Just as patients can have their pacemakers and implantable cardiac defibrillators remotely checked via phone contact, more tools will one day be available for remote assessment.

Although not every surgical patient needs to come in to the preoperative clinic, every patient must have a physical examination. All patients will be seen on the day of surgery, so in some cases the physical exam may be able to wait until then. For example, an airway assessment need not be done ahead of time. Most anesthesiologists are prepared to manage airways on very short notice, so extensive advance planning is not always necessary.

Obtain basic info by questionnaire to save staff time

Information about the patient is key to triage, and it may be either paper- or computer-based. An initial priority should be to develop some mechanism for getting information from patients before the day of their procedure without a visit to the hospital or ambulatory surgery center.

We use a two-page paper questionnaire to obtain basic information from patients, including (among other pertinent questions) age, planned operation, names of the surgeon and primary doctor, past operations and medical history, allergies, a list of medications, social history (drug, alcohol, tobacco use), whether they have ever taken steroids, whether they have high blood pressure, and whether they can comfortably walk up a flight of stairs. We provide the primary care physicians and surgeons with blank questionnaires, which their patients can fill out in their waiting rooms or take home and fax to us (or drop off) later. The questionnaire gives us a good deal of essential information without using staff time.

Various computer-based and Web-based systems are also available for collecting basic patient information. Smaller institutions need not purchase an entire electronic medical record system, which can be very expensive. Some Web-based tools operate on a pay-per-use basis and can be very helpful.

Review the information to guide triage

We then review the patient information to determine the extent of preoperative evaluation required. Some patients, especially those scheduled at an ambulatory surgery center, are healthy enough that they can just come in on the day of surgery for an examination and an update of their information. Others will need an appointment at the clinic before the day of surgery for more extensive preoperative evaluation. For other patients, review of their questionnaire responses may prompt a phone call or e-mail from the clinic for more information to determine whether a day-of-surgery exam will suffice or whether evaluation in advance is needed. When in doubt, concerns raised by the questionnaire should be explored before the day of surgery to avoid surprises and allow sufficient time for a consultation, if needed.

STANDARDIZED GUIDELINES KEEP CARE CONSISTENT

We encourage our staff to minimize preoperative testing and ECGs. A majority of diagnoses are made based on the history and physical exam.2 Generally, a test should confirm what is already suspected and merely provide objective evidence when needed. Testing in this setting should not be done to “find out what is wrong” with a patient.

It is helpful to develop standardized guidelines for preoperative assessment and make them available to everyone in the institution via the Web. The guidelines should address recommended preoperative tests and management practices according to specific patient conditions or surgical procedures. The clear objective is to avoid disagreement about what a patient needs between the provider who evaluated the patient in advance and the surgeon or anesthesiologist who evaluates the patient on the day of surgery.

Our guidelines at the University of Chicago include recommendations for patients on long-term anticoagulant therapy, for patients with coronary stents, for medications that should be discontinued (and those that may be continued) on the day of surgery, and for numerous other conditions and issues. Our testing guidelines list indicated tests for various medical problems, which in turn link to other guidelines. Other links are based on the medications a patient is using or the type of operation that is planned.

We collaborated with our electrophysiology department to create guidelines for managing patients with pacemakers and defibrillators. Almost every patient with one of these devices has a little card associated with the device, and we ask the surgeons to copy the card and send it to the clinic if we will not be directly seeing the patient. Using a national database, the electro­physiology department can determine from the card the type of pacemaker or defibrillator a patient has, and they fax or e-mail us back a page of instructions to let us know whether the device requires special consideration during surgery, whether it should be checked preoperatively, and whether its battery needs replacing. With this system, we have markedly reduced problems on the day of surgery.

 

 

CONSULTS HAVE AN IMPORTANT ROLE

Consults should never be requested in order to “clear a patient for surgery.” Consult requests should rather address specific issues, such as, “Is this patient medically optimized?” or “Please address this patient’s hypertension.” In turn, consult notes should provide meaningful information that can be used in a specific way. A clearance letter or simple risk assessment is not helpful.

If a patient has not seen a primary care doctor in a long time, a consult request should (in addition to requesting a global risk assessment) specify any particular concerns, such as, “The patient reports snoring; please address sleep apnea and cardiac risk.”

Case study: Beware consult notes with no specifics

Consider a case we encountered of a 54-year-old man who had a preoperative cardiac risk assessment. The cardiology consultant completed a short form consisting of a multiple-choice check-off list indicating low, moderate, or high cardiac risk. The consultant checked that the patient had low cardiac risk but provided no other instructions or information other than his own contact information.

When we reviewed the patient’s questionnaire, we saw that his medications included metoprolol, clopidogrel, and aspirin even though the patient did not mention that he had coronary artery disease. On this basis, we requested details about his cardiac evaluation from his cardiologist. It turned out that the patient had a history of four catheterizations with several cardiac stents placed. The most recent stent was implanted to overlap a previous stent that had been found “floating” in the blood vessel; this last stent was placed just 6 months before the cardiologist issued the consult note indicating “low cardiac risk.”

The moral is to approach consult notes with caution, especially if they offer no specifics. It actually makes me nervous when a note states “low risk” because if something unexpectedly goes wrong in surgery, it appears that the perioperative team took poor care of the patient even if the complication actually may have stemmed from higher-than-recognized underlying patient risk.

PROVIDE, AND REINFORCE, CLEAR INSTRUCTIONS

We give patients written preoperative instructions that become part of our computerized records. We first verbally give explicit instructions for each medication—ie, whether it can be taken as usual or when it needs to be stopped before surgery (and why). Then we provide the same information in writing, after which we try to have the patient repeat the instructions back to the clinician. We include a phone number that patients can call if they need help understanding their preoperative instructions.

Web-based programs also can provide patients online instructions about their medications. Some services even customize information by providing, for example, lists of local surgeons who are willing to allow a patient to continue on aspirin therapy until the day of surgery.

USE THE RIGHT RESOURCES

Staffing

Our model at the University of Chicago relies mainly on residents in training and physician assistants, but advanced nurse practitioners are well suited to a pre­operative clinic as well. These types of providers have background training in history-taking, physical examination, diagnostic testing, and disease management. Registered nurses have more limited abilities, although they may be appropriate for a clinic that deals primarily with healthy patients for whom only history taking and a list of medications is needed. Additionally, our clinic is staffed by one attending anesthesiologist at all times (from among a group of rotating anesthesiologists) as well as medical assistants and clerical staff.

Some clinics perform the surgical history and physical exam at the same time as the anesthesia assessment. I would urge caution with this practice. Just as primary care doctors should not be conducting the anesthesia assessment, nonsurgeons should not be conducting the surgical assessment; doing so puts them out on a limb from a medicolegal standpoint. Advanced nurse practitioners and physician assistants may do surgical assessments under the supervision of a surgeon, but only surgeons should ultimately decide—and document—whether an operation is necessary and what degree of examination is required in advance.

Computer technology for records, messaging, billing

Using electronic medical records and corresponding with colleagues by e-mail make preoperative care much more efficient. We have standardized computer forms for ordering tests and documenting the physical exam. Patients usually understand that electronic medical records are safe and more efficient, and they are often more accepting of their use than practitioners are. Many patients want e-mail access to doctors, to schedule appointments online, and to receive appointment reminders by e-mail.3

Electronic medical records also avoid redundancy. If a patient has been seen in our preoperative clinic and is later scheduled for another surgery (even if a different surgeon is involved), a return visit to our clinic may not be necessary. In some cases, we can send the old work-up stamped “For information only,” which can then be updated by the anesthesiologist on the day of surgery.

A central, standardized process also makes billing more efficient and helps to ensure that payment is received for all services provided. Standardized documentation makes it easier for coders to enter the correct evaluation and management codes and ensures that all required criteria are met.

THE PAYOFF: LIVES AND DOLLARS SAVED

A thorough and efficient preoperative assessment system is cost-effective. Every minute of operating room time is worth $10 to $15,4,5 so delays should be avoided. Everything that is done ahead of time saves money for the whole enterprise by reducing unnecessary case setups and reducing “down time” due to lack of patient, equipment, or staff readiness. We routinely bill for preoperative evaluations when this service goes beyond a routine preoperative assessment based on CMS (and other insurance) requirements. However, a preoperative evaluation is required by CMS and most payers if one wants to be paid for any anesthesia-provided service. As a result, a cost is incurred without offsetting revenue if a case is cancelled on the day of surgery after one performs the anesthesia evaluation.

A study we published a few years ago showed that patients who were seen in our preoperative clinic were significantly less likely to have day-of-surgery cancellations than were patients not seen in our clinic, a finding that applied to both our ambulatory surgery center and our main operating rooms (Table 1).5 These findings held even after adjustment for American Society of Anesthesiologists severity class. In addition, the median delay in surgery start time was significantly less among patients who were seen in the preoperative clinic.

Yesterday I heard someone ask, “Do we really need all this preoperative evaluation? Does it really improve outcomes?” There is some evidence that it does. A study from 2000 based on data from the Australian Incident Monitoring Study found that 11% of the 6,271 critical incidents that occurred following operations were attributable to inadequate preoperative evaluation and that 3% were unequivocally related to problems with preoperative assessment or preparation. More than half of the incidents were deemed preventable.6

Preoperative clinics are good for patients and make good sense economically. We just need to demonstrate to our administrators and to payers that we are offering an excellent service.

 

 

Cleveland Clinic IMPACT Center

By Ajay Kumar, MD

Cleveland Clinic is structured differently from most other institutions in that its surgeons, anesthesiologists, and hospitalists are all direct employees of the institution. Despite this unique structure, many aspects of our preoperative clinic—known as the Internal Medicine Preoperative Assessment, Consultation and Treatment (IMPACT) Center—are applicable to other institutions.

Cleveland Clinic is a busy surgical hospital whose preoperative optimization system is designed to provide high-quality care. The IMPACT Center is consulted for most complicated noncardiac surgery patients, and its referral sources include most of the institution’s surgical specialties.

QUEST FOR A BETTER PATIENT EXPERIENCE

When the IMPACT Center was created in 1997, the aim was to focus on the same objectives highlighted by Drs. Bader and Sweitzer: safety, a positive patient experience, enhanced communication, better continuity of care, effective use of resources, and improving throughput by standardizing care.

A prime motivator was the desire to move away from the tendency for presurgical consults to simply “clear the patient for surgery,” and we have indeed evolved considerably from that point. The focus of our peri­operative care program today is to comprehensively evaluate risk by taking into account patient-, procedure-, and anesthesia-related factors.

We offer “one-stop shopping,” and our priority is for efficient throughput. We are located in a 12-story building that includes outpatient, preoperative, and surgical clinics and offices. The IMPACT Center is on the first floor along with the preoperative anesthesia consultation and evaluation (PACE) clinic, the laboratory, and ECG and stress-test labs. Patients can undergo radiographic studies on the second floor.

The patient experience counts for a lot. Many of our patients are from another state or country, so efficiency and convenience are especially important. Patients can usually get all assessment and testing done in a single day.

A TIGHTLY MANAGED PROCESS

A ‘smart’ questionnaire starts the process

Figure 1. Flow chart of the preoperative evaluation process at Cleveland Clinic.
Our process (Figure 1) begins in the surgeons’ offices, where a patient is seen by a surgeon and an operation is deemed necessary. There the patient is asked to fill out a computer-assisted health screening questionnaire available online. The questionnaire is very sophisticated: based on the patient’s answers, it asks further pertinent questions and requests details if the history is complicated. A patient with multiple health problems may take 20 minutes to complete it, while a healthy patient may take only 3 minutes.

A computerized report based on the questionnaire guides the surgical office in scheduling the patient to specific areas according to algorithms. Based on case complexity and clinical needs, patients are scheduled for the IMPACT Center along with the PACE clinic; if needed (based on the algorithms), patients also are scheduled for laboratory tests or imaging. This standardized approach helps create a safe passage for patients through the preoperative process with less confusion.

Patient is given a personalized binder

Once all appointments and tests are scheduled, the patient is given a binder containing specific information about the procedure and preoperative instructions. The medical appointment at the IMPACT Center is usually scheduled before the PACE clinic appointment. Patients receive an itinerary for all preoperative appointments and surgical office appointments before the planned surgery. The itinerary is planned so that if additional testing is requested, it can be accommodated on the same day.

At the end of the preoperative assessment, the patient receives printed information with specific preoperative instructions, including which medications to continue or stop.

Standardized, computer-based medical records

Our systems and processes have undergone a good deal of evolution. We have integrated our medical records and use a standard outside medical record retrieval process. The template for the history and physical exam is standard for all Cleveland Clinic patients and is used for all presurgical assessments before all noncardiac surgeries. The template is comprehensive, including the history of the present illness, the review of systems, the physical exam, and anesthesia-related issues. All outside documents are scanned into our electronic medical record system and are available for viewing prior to surgery from any computer connected to the system.

Our preoperative assessment guidelines are also kept updated at a central online location so that all providers have access to them.

Staff keeps process running efficiently

The IMPACT Center is managed by the department of hospital medicine and supported by at least 5.5 full-time physicians every day. We also have two registered nurses, two assistants who help with scheduling and testing, and three secretaries who support the doctors, obtain records, and make arrangements with outside doctors for testing if a patient wants to return home before our testing can be completed.

A secretary also keeps a log for each patient seen in the clinic, tracking all pending issues. The day before surgery, the secretary contacts the appropriate office for anything that is still pending. If she gets no response, the matter is transferred to one of our doctors so that the problem can be resolved at once. This strategy allows us to achieve a nearly 0% rate of surgery delay or cancellation attributable to unavailable test results.

Our patient volumes have increased significantly since we started in 1997. Last year more than 15,000 patients visited the IMPACT Center and now we have expanded our services to regional hospitals within the Cleveland Clinic Health System.

INTERDEPARTMENTAL COMMUNICATION IS CRITICAL

Interdepartmental communication is a must for patient safety, so we encourage a culture of communication between the hospitalist and the surgical team. The location of most of our surgical clinics within the same building as the IMPACT Center further facilitates communication, as does the proximity of the PACE clinic. Additionally, one of our IMPACT Center physicians is accessible around the clock to answer to our surgeon or anesthesiologist colleagues as needed.

We regularly assess our process and seek feedback from surgeons and anesthesiologists. We also conduct yearly patient experience surveys to make sure we are providing patients with the highest quality of care.

 

 

Discussion

Question from the audience: Our anesthesia assessment department was approached by our surgeons to do both the anesthesia and surgical assessments, but we felt that would put us in a potential legal conflict if a patient who was assessed that way developed problems. Can you comment?

Dr. Bader: Although we do surgical assessments at our preoperative clinic, we don’t make any decisions about whether or not to proceed with an operation. We get an office note from the surgeon that is directed specifically toward the need for surgery, indications for surgery, and surgical consent. We perform the surgical history and physical examination. Our process is essentially the same as when surgeons have a physician assistant do the history and physical examination in their office. Our practitioners are employed by the hospital, so there is no conflict of interest there.

Comment from the audience: I’m a strong believer in hands-on patient contact. Over my 15 years of practice, we have encountered a lot of unexpected problems during the preoperative exam—aortic stenoses, infections, ventricular septal defects—all of which would never have been detected from a screening form.

Dr. Sweitzer: I agree that we pick up many things by seeing the patient in person. I’ve picked up more cases of aortic stenosis as an anesthesiologist in the preoperative clinic than I ever did as an internist, because the population is high-risk. But patients who have such problems tend to have risk factors and be in certain age groups. Studies indicate that the history is more important than the physical exam: the history suggests about 75% of conditions that are present. The physical exam adds only a little more—perhaps another 15%. Our recommendations are very much consistent with the American College of Cardiology and American Heart Association guidelines on preoperative cardiac evaluation.7 It is more important to identify whether a patient has risk factors for coronary artery disease than to find out whether a stress test or ECG is normal. One needs to do a really good history, but it can be done remotely. Based on certain risk factors identified, high-risk patients can be selected who need to come in and have a physical exam.

Question from the audience: Could you elaborate on the electronic medical record system used at the University of Chicago? I’ve heard there’s a steep learning curve when implementing these kinds of systems. They also are very expensive—I’ve heard that some cost $40 to $80 million. Has enhanced revenue flow offset the costs?

Dr. Sweitzer: We have a home-grown system developed with FileMaker Pro by a computer programmer at our institution. It was a lot easier to develop than people tend to think. There are many savvy computer programmers out there; I’ve had medical students assist me with updating it. We’re now considering developing it as a commercial system. Many systems are available for purchase, including Epic, Pyxis, one from General Electric, and many others. They are very expensive, so smaller institutions might want to use a pay-for-service system.

There definitely is a learning curve to switching to electronic medical records, but it is not nearly as steep as many believe. The extra time it takes a clinician to initially make a computer entry rather than write on paper is vastly recouped downstream: the electronic medical record is legible and organized, and it doesn’t get lost or need to be redone. You can bring up a patient record from 6 months before and reuse it as a template.

Dr. Bader: The discussion of cost savings from preoperative clinics usually focuses on savings from avoiding surgery cancellations and delays and from more efficient laboratory testing, but the biggest savings for an institution is better reimbursement through better diagnosis-related groups (DRG) coding. That’s an important reason our institution is funding our clinic. Electronic medical records allow standardization of information so that coders know exactly where to look for the comorbidities and other pertinent information. This increases payments for DRGs, which can be documented for the hospital. This literally runs into millions of dollars a year and more than offsets the costs of the system.

Question from the audience: Dr. Bader, I’m impressed with the number of patients going through your pre­operative clinic. How many patients are seen per nurse practitioner in your clinic?

Dr. Bader: The nurse practitioners have 10-hour shifts and see one patient every 75 minutes. The process of seeing a patient takes a lot less time now than with the old system, in which patients saw an anesthesiologist plus a nurse. Our current system eliminates redundancy: questions need to be asked only once.

Question from the audience: My compliance office says that preoperative assessments for early-morning admission patients are good for only 7 days. Is that true?

Dr. Bader: There are sometimes differences between Joint Commission requirements and those of certain insurance companies. That kind of issue needs to be discussed with your hospital compliance office. We program rules into our scheduling system to accommodate different insurance policies and other requirements so that a patient is not scheduled beyond the allowable period.

References
  1. Detsky AS, Naglie IG. A clinician’s guide to cost-effectiveness analysis. Ann Intern Med 1990; 113:147–154.
  2. Sandler G. The importance of the history in the medical clinic and the cost of unnecessary tests. Am Heart J 1980; 100:928–931.
  3. Blumenthal D, Glaser JP. Information technology comes to medicine. N Engl J Med 2007; 356:2527–2534.
  4. Strum DP, Vargas LG, May JH. Surgical subspecialty block utilization and capacity planning: a minimal cost analysis model. Anesthesiology 1999; 90:1176–1185.
  5. Ferschl MB, Tung A, Sweitzer B, Huo D, Glick DB. Preoperative clinic visits reduce operating room cancellations and delays. Anesthesiology 2005; 103:855–859.
  6. Kluger MT, Tham EJ, Coleman NA, et al. Inadequate preoperative evaluation and preparation: a review of 197 reports from the Australian incident monitoring study. Anaesthesia 2000; 55:1173–1178.
  7. Fleisher LA, Beckman JA, Brown KA, et al. ACC/AHA 2007 guidelines on perioperative cardiovascular evaluation and care for noncardiac surgery: a report of the American College of Cardiology/American Heart Association Task Force on Practice Guidelines. J Am Coll Cardiol 2007; 50:1707–1732.
References
  1. Detsky AS, Naglie IG. A clinician’s guide to cost-effectiveness analysis. Ann Intern Med 1990; 113:147–154.
  2. Sandler G. The importance of the history in the medical clinic and the cost of unnecessary tests. Am Heart J 1980; 100:928–931.
  3. Blumenthal D, Glaser JP. Information technology comes to medicine. N Engl J Med 2007; 356:2527–2534.
  4. Strum DP, Vargas LG, May JH. Surgical subspecialty block utilization and capacity planning: a minimal cost analysis model. Anesthesiology 1999; 90:1176–1185.
  5. Ferschl MB, Tung A, Sweitzer B, Huo D, Glick DB. Preoperative clinic visits reduce operating room cancellations and delays. Anesthesiology 2005; 103:855–859.
  6. Kluger MT, Tham EJ, Coleman NA, et al. Inadequate preoperative evaluation and preparation: a review of 197 reports from the Australian incident monitoring study. Anaesthesia 2000; 55:1173–1178.
  7. Fleisher LA, Beckman JA, Brown KA, et al. ACC/AHA 2007 guidelines on perioperative cardiovascular evaluation and care for noncardiac surgery: a report of the American College of Cardiology/American Heart Association Task Force on Practice Guidelines. J Am Coll Cardiol 2007; 50:1707–1732.
Page Number
S104-S111
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S104-S111
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Nuts and bolts of preoperative clinics: The view from three institutions
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Nuts and bolts of preoperative clinics: The view from three institutions
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Cleveland Clinic Journal of Medicine 2009 November;76(suppl 4):S104-S111
Inside the Article

KEY POINTS

  • Standardizing the preoperative assessment process helps ensure that regulatory, accreditation, and payer requirements and guidelines are met.
  • Careful triage based on a patient’s history can help avoid unnecessary assessment of low-risk patients and ensure that necessary assessments for higher-risk patients are completed before the day of surgery.
  • Perioperative assessment and management guidelines for various types of surgery and patient risk factors should be developed, continuously updated, and made available online to all providers within the institution.
  • Electronic medical records allow standardization of patient information, avoid redundancy, and provide a database for research.
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