The decision whether to operate a patient or not can be challenging for a clinician for both ruptured abdominal aoitic aneurysms (AAAs) as well as elective AAAs. Prior to surgical interv ention it would be preferable that the clinician exactly knows which clinical variables lower or increase the chances of morbidity and mortality postinteivention. To help in the preoperative counselling and shared decision making several clinical variables can be identified as risk factors and with these, risk models can be developed. An ideal risk score for aneurysm repair includes routinely obtained physiological and anatomical variables, has excellent discrimination and calibration, and is validated in different geographical areas. For elective AAA repair, several risk scores are available, for ruptured AAA treatment, these scores are far less well developed. In this manuscript, we describe the designs and results of published risk scores for elective and open repair. Also, suggestions for uniformly reporting of risk factors and their statistical analyses are described. Furthermore, the preliminary results of a new risk model for ruptured aortic aneurysm will be discussed. This score identifies age. hemoglobin, cardiopulmonary resuscitation and preoperative systolic blood pressure as risk factors after multivariate regression analysis. This new risk score can help to identify patients that would not benefit from repair, but it can also potentially identify patients who would benefit and therefore lower turndown rates. The challenge for further research is to expand on validation of already existing promising risk scores in order to come to a risk model with optimal discrimination and calibration.

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hdl.handle.net/1765/97321
The Journal of Cardiovascular Surgery: a journal on cardiac, vascular and thoracic surgery
Department of Vascular Surgery

von Meijenfeldt, G. C. I., Van Der Laan, M.J. (Maarten J.), Zeebregts, C., Balm, R., & Verhagen, H. (2016). Risk assessment and risk scores in the management of aortic aneurysms. The Journal of Cardiovascular Surgery: a journal on cardiac, vascular and thoracic surgery, 57(2), 162–171. Retrieved from http://hdl.handle.net/1765/97321