The authors prospectively studied 455 consecutive patients referred to the general medical consultation service for cardiac
risk assessment prior to non-cardiac surgery, in order to validate a previously derived multifactorial index in their clinical
setting. They also tested a version of the index that they had modified to reflect factors they believed to be important.
For patients undergoing major surgery, the original index performed less well in the validation data set than in the original
derivation set (p<0.05), but still added predictive information to a statistically significant degree (p<0.05). The modified
index also added predictive information for patients undergoing both major and minor surgery, demonstrating an area under
the Receiver Operating Characteristic curve of 0.75 (95% confidence interval of 0.70 to 0.80). A simple nomogram is presented
which will enable conversion of pretest probabilities into posttest probabilities using the likelihood ratios associated with
each risk score. It is recommended that clinicians estimate local overall complication rates (pretest probabilities) for the
clinically relevant populations in their settings before they apply the predictive properties (likelihood ratios) demonstrated
in this study in order to calculate cardiac risks for individual patients (posttest probabilities).
Key words cardiac risks - surgery - consultation service
Received from the Departments of Health Administration and Medicine, University of Toronto, and the Division of General Internal
Medicine and Clinical Epidemiology, Toronto General Hospital, Toronto, Ontario, Canada.
Supported by an Ontario Ministry of Health Research Grant (DM616 and 00621) and the Toronto General Hospital Foundation. Also
supported in part by the National Health and Research Development Program (Canada) through a National Health Research Scholar
Award to Dr. Detsky.