The website may be down at times on Saturday, November 30, and Sunday, December 1, for maintenance. 

brand logo

Am Fam Physician. 2013;88(7):424

Original Article: Preoperative Testing Before Noncardiac Surgery: Guidelines and Recommendations

Issue Date: March 15, 2013

See additional reader comments at: https://www.aafp.org/afp/2013/0315/p414.html

TO THE EDITOR: I appreciated Dr. Feely and colleagues' article on preoperative cardiac testing recommendations. My golden rule for ordering cardiac testing before noncardiac surgery is that the patient should have an indication for testing independent of the planned procedure. I do not order preoperative cardiac tests because the patient is having surgery. If a patient needs cardiac testing, then he or she has an indication, whether or not surgery is planned. This principle greatly simplifies the preoperative cardiac tests that are ordered—or better yet, not ordered.

One recommendation I would add is to obtain a preoperative creatinine level before any procedure that requires the use of intravenous contrast media.

Finally, I offer a caveat about the recommendation to forego preoperative testing before cataract surgery, which was based on a large randomized trial.1 One fact about this study that is rarely mentioned is that patients were excluded if they received general anesthesia. Many cataract surgeries are done under general anesthesia with endotracheal intubation. Therefore, the risk of complications in patients receiving general anesthesia with intubation would be higher even in this low-risk surgery, and may indicate the need for specific preoperative testing.

IN REPLY: We thank Dr. Thompson for his thoughtful comments regarding preoperative testing in noncardiac surgery. Although his suggested golden rule would be appropriate in most circumstances, the recommendations in our article are based on published evidence and guidelines.

We respectfully disagree with the recommendation to obtain a serum creatinine level before any procedure that requires intravenous contrast media. The decision to obtain a preprocedural creatinine level should be based on the clinical likelihood of occult renal failure and the risk of the procedure. In a prospective cohort study published in 2000, risk factor assessment predicted 97% of patients with abnormal serum creatinine levels.1 On the other hand, preprocedural measurement of serum creatinine may be warranted even in healthy patients undergoing high-risk procedures that require a large intravenous contrast bolus, or a prolonged procedure that carries a high risk of concomitant hypotension in addition to the use of intravenous contrast media. Physicians should base the decision to test on the patient's risk assessment and on the procedure being performed.

Dr. Thompson is correct that in the major randomized controlled trial that was the basis for our recommendation against preoperative testing in routine cataract surgery, planned general anesthesia was an exclusion criterion.2 However, it is rare that patients require general anesthesia for cataract surgery. In a national survey of U.S. Veterans Health Administration chiefs of ophthalmology, the mean prevalence of general anesthesia in cataract surgery was only 3.7%.3 In almost all of these cases, general anesthesia was used because the patient was unable to remain still for the procedure. Such an unusual occurrence should prompt physicians to reevaluate the perioperative risk assessment and consider how the guidelines apply to the specific situation. Even with general anesthesia, however, cataract surgery is still a low-risk procedure, and perioperative testing is likely not indicated in most cases.

Email letter submissions to afplet@aafp.org. Letters should be fewer than 400 words and limited to six references, one table or figure, and three authors. Letters submitted for publication in AFP must not be submitted to any other publication. Letters may be edited to meet style and space requirements.

This series is coordinated by Kenny Lin, MD, MPH, deputy editor.

Continue Reading


More in AFP

More in PubMed

Copyright © 2013 by the American Academy of Family Physicians.

This content is owned by the AAFP. A person viewing it online may make one printout of the material and may use that printout only for his or her personal, non-commercial reference. This material may not otherwise be downloaded, copied, printed, stored, transmitted or reproduced in any medium, whether now known or later invented, except as authorized in writing by the AAFP.  See permissions for copyright questions and/or permission requests.