Objective: To delineate clinician opinion on the efficacy, safety, and logistics of perioperative beta-adrenergic blockade for patients undergoing noncardiac surgery.
Design: Survey of opinions and clinical practices.
Setting: Internet-based survey form.
Participants: Members of the Associations of Veterans Affairs Anesthesiologists and Surgeons and chiefs of cardiology in centers with surgical programs.
Interventions: None.
Measurements and main results: One hundred twenty-seven responses from 62 Veterans Affairs Medical Centers in 35 states (57 anesthesiologists, 45 surgeons, 25 cardiologists) were analyzed. Ninety-two percent agreed that it is effective in reducing short-term adverse outcomes, declining to 60% for long-term outcome. There was greater enthusiasm for its use in patients with known coronary artery disease (87%) than in patients with risk factors only (72%). Although 66% considered it efficacious in vascular surgery, only 30% were convinced it was for nonvascular surgery (with a similar distribution for safety in these settings). Preoperative use was favored (94%), with most physicians favoring use within 1 week of surgery (52%). Most favored 1 to 2 weeks of postoperative therapy (43%), with the remainder favoring shorter (19%) or longer (35%) durations. Although 71% of clinicians reported frequent use in their practice, most believed its use was largely informal by their colleagues (83%) and rarely based on a formal clinical pathway (13%).
Conclusion: A wide range of opinions by clinicians regarding the efficacy, safety, and logistics of perioperative beta-adrenergic blockade was encountered, suggesting need for additional clinical research and centralized efforts at increasing compliance with existing guidelines.