Published October 2, 2020 | Version v1
Dataset Restricted

Data set from Ranucci M, Barile L, Ambrogi F, Pistuddi V; Surgical and Clinical Outcome Research (SCORE) Group. Discrimination and calibration properties of the hypotension probability indicator during cardiac and vascular surgery. Minerva Anestesiol. 2019 Jul;85(7):724-730. doi: 10.23736/S0375-9393.18.12620-4. Epub 2018 Nov 22. PMID: 30481996.

  • 1. Department of Cardiothoracic and Vascular Anesthesia and ICU, San Donato IRCCS Policlinic, Milan, Italy
  • 2. Department of Cardiothoracic and Vascular Anesthesia and ICU, San Donato IRCCS Policlinic, Milan, Italy.

Description

Data set from Ranucci M, Barile L, Ambrogi F, Pistuddi V; Surgical and Clinical Outcome Research (SCORE) Group. Discrimination and calibration properties of the hypotension probability indicator during cardiac and vascular surgery. Minerva Anestesiol. 2019 Jul;85(7):724-730. doi: 10.23736/S0375-9393.18.12620-4. Epub 2018 Nov 22. PMID: 30481996.

 

This is the abstract:

Background: Hypotension during surgery is linked to postoperative complications. Recently, a new hemodynamic algorithm intended to predict hypotensive events (hypotension probability indicator [HPI]) has been developed. The aim of the present study is to test the discrimination and calibration properties of the HPI.

Methods: The intraoperative files of 23 patients undergoing cardiac and major vascular surgery receiving the HPI-based hemodynamic monitoring were retrospectively investigated for prediction of hypotensive events (mean arterial pressure <65 mmHg). The HPI was available at 20 seconds intervals; the values of HPI five to seven minutes before a hypotensive event (HPI5-7) were tested for discrimination and calibration.

Results: The HPI5-7 has a fair level of discrimination (area under the curve 0.768) and a poor calibration, due to overestimation of the hypotensive risk. At the observed prevalence, a cut-off value of 85% carries a sensitivity of 62.4% and a specificity of 77.7%, a negative predictive value (NPV) of 97.8% and a positive predictive value (PPV) of 12.6%; a value of 98% has a PPV of 64% and an NPV of 95.3%.

Conclusions: The HPI5-7 may offer some useful insights. Values ≤85% carry a clinically acceptable NPV for hypotensive events at the observed prevalence and may represent a "safe zone" during surgery. Values >85% do not carry enough PPV to trigger hemodynamic interventions, but represent a warning signal. Values >98% are highly suggesting a hypotensive event after 5-7 minutes. Further studies exploring the predictive ability of the HPI at different times are needed.

Files

Restricted

The record is publicly accessible, but files are restricted to users with access.

Request access

If you would like to request access to these files, please fill out the form below.

You need to satisfy these conditions in order for this request to be accepted:

Data set available on motivated request to the corrisponding author

You are currently not logged in. Do you have an account? Log in here