Cardiac surgery in the elderly: What goals of care?

Submitted: May 17, 2017
Accepted: May 17, 2017
Published: July 18, 2017
Abstract Views: 1747
PDF: 907
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At present, the majority of cardiac surgery interventions have been performed in the elderly with successful short-term mortality and morbidity, however significant difficulties must to be underlined about our capacity to predict long-term outcomes such as disability, worsening quality of life and loss of functional capacity.
The reason probably resides on inability to capture preoperative frailty phenotype with current cardiac surgery risk scores and consequently we are unable to outline the postoperative trajectory of an important patients’ centered outcome such as disability free survival. In this perspective, more than one geriatric statements have stressed the systematic underuse of patient reported outcomes in cardiovascular trials even after taking account of their relevance to older feel and wishes. Thus, in the next future is mandatory for geriatric cardiology community closes this gap of evidences through planning of trials in which patients’ centered outcomes are considered as primary goals of therapies as well as cardiovascular ones.

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Pratesi, Alessandra, Francesco Orso, Camilla Ghiara, Aldo Lo Forte, Anna Chiara Baroncini, Maria Laura Di Meo, Emanuele Carassi, and Samuele Baldasseroni. 2017. “Cardiac Surgery in the Elderly: What Goals of Care?”. Monaldi Archives for Chest Disease 87 (2). https://doi.org/10.4081/monaldi.2017.852.

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