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Title: | Effect of QT Interval Prolongation on Cardiac Arrest following Liver Transplantation and Derivation of a Risk Index. | Austin Authors: | Koshy, Anoop N ;Ko, Jefferson ;Farouque, Omar ;Cooray, Shamil D;Han, Hui-Chen ;Cailes, Benjamin ;Gow, Paul J ;Weinberg, Laurence ;Testro, Adam G ;Lim, Han S ;Teh, Andrew W | Affiliation: | Anaesthesia The University of Melbourne, Parkville, Victoria, Australia Victorian Liver Transplant Unit Cardiology Monash Centre for Health Research and Implementation, School of Public Health and Preventive Medicine, Monash University, Melbourne, Australia |
Issue Date: | Feb-2021 | Date: | 2020-06-12 | Publication information: | American Journal of Transplantation 2021; 21(2): 593-603 | Abstract: | Liver transplantation(LT) has a four-fold higher risk of periprocedural cardiac arrest and ventricular arrhythmias(CA/VA) compared with other noncardiac surgeries. Prolongation of the corrected QT interval(QTc) is common in patients with liver cirrhosis. Whether it is associated with an increased risk of CA/VA following LT is unclear. Rates of 30-day CA/VA post-LT was assessed in consecutive adults undergoing LT between 2010-2017. Pre-transplant QTc was measured by a cardiologist blinded to clinical outcomes. Among 408 patients included, CA/VA occurred in 26(6.4%) patients. QTc was significantly longer in CA/VA patients(475±34 vs 450±34 milliseconds, p<0.001). Optimal QTc cut-off for prediction of CA/VA was ≥480ms. After adjustment, QTc≥480ms remained the strongest predictor for the occurrence of CA/VA(Odds ratio[OR] 5.2 95%CI 2.2-12.6). A point-based cardiac arrest risk index(CARI) was derived with the bootstrap method for yielding optimism-corrected coefficients(2-points:QTc ≥480, 1-point:MELD≥30, 1-point:age≥65 and 1-point:male). CARI score≥3 demonstrated moderate discrimination(c-statistic 0.79, optimism-corrected c-statistic 0.77) with appropriate calibration. Conclusion: QTc≥480ms was associated with a five-fold increase in the risk of CA/VA. The CARI score may identify patients at higher risk of these events. Whether heightened perioperative cardiac surveillance, avoidance of QT prolonging medications or beta-blockers could mitigate the risk of CA/VA in this population merits further study. | URI: | https://ahro.austin.org.au/austinjspui/handle/1/23500 | DOI: | 10.1111/ajt.16145 | ORCID: | 0000-0001-6505-7233 0000-0002-8741-8631 0000-0001-7403-7680 |
Journal: | American Journal of Transplantation | PubMed URL: | 32530547 | Type: | Journal Article |
Appears in Collections: | Journal articles |
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