Abstract

BackgroundThe sensitivity and specificity of exercise testing have never been studied simultaneously against an objective quantification of arterial stenosis. Aims were to define the sensitivity and specificity of several exercise tests to detect peripheral artery disease (PAD), and to assess whether or not defined criteria defined in patients suspected of having a PAD show a difference dependent on the resting ABI.MethodsIn this prospective study, consecutive patients with exertional limb pain referred to our vascular center were included. All patients had an ABI, a treadmill exercise-oximetry test, a second treadmill test (both 10% slope; 3.2km/h speed) with post-exercise pressures, and a computed-tomography-angiography (CTA). The receiver-operating-characteristic curve was used to define a cut-off point corresponding to the best area under the curve (AUC; [CI95%]) to detect arterial stenosis ≥50% as determined by the CTA.ResultsSixty-three patients (61+/-11 years-old) were included. Similar AUCs from 0.72[0.63–0.79] to 0.83[0.75–0.89] were found for the different tests in the overall population. To detect arterial stenosis ≥50%, cut-off values of ABI, post-exercise ABI, post-exercise ABI decrease, post-exercise ankle pressure decrease, and distal delta from rest oxygen pressure (DROP) index were ≤0.91, ≤0.52, ≥43%, ≥20mmHg and ≤-15mmHg, respectively (p<0.01). In the subset of patients with an ABI >0.91, cut-off values of post-exercise ABI decrease (AUC = 0.67[0.53–0.78]), and DROP (AUC = 0.67[0.53–0.78]) were ≥18.5%, and ≤-15mmHg respectively (p<0.05).ConclusionResting ABI is as accurate as exercise testing in patients with exertional limb pain. Specific exercise testing cut-off values should be used in patients with normal ABI to diagnose PAD.

Highlights

  • Peripheral artery disease (PAD) affects more than 200 million people worldwide.[1]

  • Specific exercise testing cut-off values should be used in patients with normal ABI to diagnose peripheral artery disease (PAD)

  • The ankle brachial index at rest (ABI) is the ratio of the highest systolic blood pressure measured in each ankle to the highest systolic blood pressure measured in the arms. [2,3] This is the main clinical test recommended by the guidelines of the American Heart Association (AHA) to diagnose the presence and severity of PAD regardless of the symptoms presented by patients.[4]

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Summary

Introduction

Peripheral artery disease (PAD) affects more than 200 million people worldwide.[1]. The ankle brachial index at rest (ABI) is the ratio of the highest systolic blood pressure measured in each ankle to the highest systolic blood pressure measured in the arms. [2,3] This is the main clinical test recommended by the guidelines of the American Heart Association (AHA) to diagnose the presence and severity of PAD regardless of the symptoms presented by patients.[4]For intermittent claudication (exertional limb pain that is relieved by rest), it has been suggested that exercise or post-exercise assessments (ABI, Doppler waveforms analysis) could be better than resting investigations to detect stenosis that are hemodynamically silent at rest but significant during exercise. It is unlikely that post-exercise findings are similar in patients suspected of having a PAD with ABI > 0.90 compared to the findings in patients regardless of the ABI. An updated exercise protocol used for exercise-oximetry (exercise-TcPO2) has been developed.[7,8] In our previous study we have confirmed in 34 patients included from 2014 to 2015 the accuracy of exercise TcPO2 to diagnose arterial stenosis.[8] in this study the accuracies of the other classical tests (ABI and post-exercise ABI) were not studied. Aims were to define the sensitivity and specificity of several exercise tests to detect peripheral artery disease (PAD), and to assess whether or not defined criteria defined in patients suspected of having a PAD show a difference dependent on the resting ABI.

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