Objective: It is not clear whether the severity of coronary artery disease as assessed on angiography has an impact on the postoperative outcome after coronary artery bypass surgery (CABG).
Design: The angiographic status of 15 coronary arteries/segments of 2,233 patients who underwent isolated on-pump CABG was graded according to the following criteria: 1 = no stenosis; 2 = stenosis <50%; 3 = stenosis of 50-69%; 4 = stenosis of 70-89%; 5 = stenosis of 90-99%; 6 = vessel occlusion; and 7 = vessel is not visualized.
Results: Thirty-seven patients (1.7%) died during the in-hospital stay and 108 (4.8%) developed postoperatively low cardiac output syndrome. Multivariate analysis showed that along with other risk factors the overall coronary angiographic score was predictive of postoperative death (p = 0.03; OR: 1.027, 95% CI: 1.003-1.052) and of low cardiac output syndrome (p = 0.04; OR: 1.172, 95% CI: 1.010-1.218). The status of the proximal segment of the left circumflex coronary artery, the diagonal arteries and the left obtuse marginal arteries was most closely associated with adverse postoperative outcome.
Conclusion: The angiographic status of coronary arteries has an impact on the immediate outcome after CABG.