Abstract

The protective role of preoperative beta-blocker in patients undergoing non-cardiac surgery is unknown. We aimed to evaluate the effects of beta-blocker on perioperative myocardial injury in patients undergoing non-cardiac surgery. We consecutively enrolled 112 patients undergoing non-cardiac surgery. They were randomly allocated to receive bisoprolol or placebo given at least 2 days preoperatively and continued until 30 days after surgery. The primary outcome was incidence of perioperative myocardial injury defined by a rise of high-sensitive troponin-T (hs-TnT) more than 99th percentile of upper reference limit or a rise of hs-TnT more than 20% if baseline level is abnormal. Baseline characteristics were comparable between bisoprolol and placebo in randomized cohort Mean age was 62.5 ± 11.8 years and 76 (67.8%) of 112 patients were male. Among 112 patients, 49 (43.8%) underwent vascular surgery and 63 (56.2%) underwent thoracic surgery. The median duration of assigned treatment prior to surgery was 4 days (2–6 days). We did not demonstrate the significant difference in the incidence of perioperative myocardial injury [52.6% (30 of 57 patients) vs. 49.1% (27 of 55 patients), P = 0.706]. In addition, the incidence of intraoperative hypotension was higher in bisoprolol group than placebo group in patients undergoing non-cardiac surgery [70.2% (40 of 57 patients) vs. 47.3% (26 of 55 patients), P = 0.017]. We demonstrated that there was no statistically significant difference in perioperative myocardial injury observed between patients receiving bisoprolol and placebo who had undergone non-cardiac surgery.

Highlights

  • The protective role of preoperative beta-blocker in patients undergoing non-cardiac surgery is unknown

  • POISE study has shown that perioperative high-dose metoprolol beginning within 24 h prior to non-cardiac surgery is associated with the increased risk of bradycardia, hypotension, stroke and ­mortality[9]

  • The majority of patients (70.2%) group had no clinical risk factors according to revised cardiac risk index (RCRI)

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Summary

Introduction

The protective role of preoperative beta-blocker in patients undergoing non-cardiac surgery is unknown. POISE study has shown that perioperative high-dose metoprolol beginning within 24 h prior to non-cardiac surgery is associated with the increased risk of bradycardia, hypotension, stroke and ­mortality[9]. With this regard, international guidelines state that beta-blocker treatment is not advised to start within one day before the s­ urgery[10,11]. We aimed to investigate whether the short-term oral bisoprolol given at least 2 days preoperatively could prevent myocardial injury after surgery in patients undergoing non-cardiac surgery as compared to placebo

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