
The prevalence of abnormal scan increased with the degree of risk, from 12.7% in low-risk patients to 50.8% among very high-risk subjects. Interestingly, only in patients with one risk factor (either age ≥50years, diabetes or CV disease) was an altered myocardialstress test associated with an increased incidence of majorCV events [30.3 versus 10%, hazard ratio (HR) =2.37; p below 0.0001). Low-riskpatients did well regardless of stress test results, while in patients with 2 or 3risk factors, altered stress test did not add to the already increased risk forfuture CV events. The question that remains is whether an invasive intervention could lower the CV events in the high-risk groups and if coronary angiography should be considered instead of stress test, as proposed by some. The cost, invasiveness and risk of the procedure would likely be unwarranted until a randomized trial show benefits of revascularization in ESRD pts compared to medical management. It is important to remember that most clinical trials addressing this question excludes ESRD patients so we must extrapolate data from the general population, which do not support intervention in asymptomatic patients. An upcoming randomized controlled trial is addressing this question in transplantation: COST trial.Until then, we have to base our decisions on observational/restrospective data and poor evidence-based guidelines. My personal approach has been not to screen low risk patients with stress test anymore but I am still performing stress tests for the intermediate and high risk patients. The reason to do a stress test on a high risk patient is not to assess for the presence or not of CV disease, but to attempt to identify a large defect, exercise-induced hypotension or angina that might warrant intervention prior to transplantation. Among the stress tests, I usually recommend a MIBI protocol with sequential exercise followed by pharmacological (if HR goal not achieved), which allows for evaluation of patient's exercise capacity and cardiac imaging to determine the burden of CV disease. For obese patients, PET may give you better images. To provoke even more the debate, Diamond et al. supports the approach of: "test no one and treat everyone" for asymptomatic diabetic patients compared to "screen everyone and treat only those with an abnormal test". The authors believe that optimal medical interventions such as statins/beta blocker are sometimes ignored after a normal stress test (high false negative rate), missing an important point of intervention, which could be more cost-effective than the screening strategy. Definitely lots of fuel for more debate...
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