Archive/Beating-Heart Coronary Artery Bypass Grafting in Patients with End-Stage Renal Failure: Short-Term Gains, Intermediate-Term Losses
Beating-Heart Coronary Artery Bypass Grafting in Patients with End-Stage Renal Failure: Short-Term Gains, Intermediate-Term Losses
Louis Samuels, Suzanne Raws, Molly Casey
5. Juli 2026
en

Abstract

Introduction: Coronary artery bypass grafting (CABG) in patients with chronic kidney disease/chronic renal failure (CKD/CRF) poses additional surgical risk, both perioperatively and beyond, compared to their non-renal failure counterparts. Patients with end-stage renal disease (ESRD) are at particularly high risk for complications with prognoses limited by cardiovascular (e.g., myocardial infarction, heart failure, stroke) and non-cardiovascular (e.g., infection) conditions associated with the disease itself and the treatment of it (i.e., dialysis). For decades, cardiac surgeons have continued to offer CABG to patients with ESRD on dialysis with variable success. The purpose of this report is to describe a relatively contemporary analysis of CABG surgery in ESRD patients utilizing a pump-assisted beating-heart technique with the analysis of and comparison to outcomes reported by other investigators as well as predictions generated by the Society of Thoracic Surgery outcome tool. We report both short- and intermediate-term outcomes. Methods: From 1 January 2019 through 31 May 2025, the data from all consecutive patients undergoing BH-CABG at a single institution by a single surgeon were collected. Demographic information as well as a preoperative risk assessment was performed using the Society of Thoracic Surgeon (STS) Risk Assessment tool. The BH-CABG was performed via median sternotomy with maintenance of normothermia and ventilation throughout the case. Postoperative outcomes were recorded including mortality, major morbidity, and length of stay (LOS). Hospital/operative results were compared to the STS risk calculations. On-going intermediate-term follow-up beyond the index hospitalization was completed using direct or indirect methods (i.e., clinic, telephone, email). Results: There were 439 BH-CABG patients during the study period. Fifty-nine patients (13.4%) had ESRD on HD. There were 39 men and 20 women with a mean age of 61 years (41–76 years). Fifty-one (86%) underwent pump-assisted BH-CABG (PADCAB) and eight patients underwent complete off-pump BH-CABG (OPCAB). The mean ejection fraction (EF) was 48% (15–70%). The mean number of grafts was 2.3 (1 to 4) and the mean cardiopulmonary bypass (CPB) time for the PADCAB cases was 80 min (34 to 118 min). Patient presentation consisted of the following: one with cardiogenic shock, one with cardiac arrest, two with STEMI, 18 with NSTEMIs, 10 with CHF, five with NSTEMI/CHF, six with unstable angina (USA), and 16 with a positive stress test in preparation for renal transplant consideration. There was one operative mortality (1.7%), one stroke (1.7%), no reoperation for bleeding, no deep sternal wound infection, one prolonged ventilation (1.7%), and one prolonged length of stay (1.7%); overall mortality/morbidity was 5.1%. Comparatively, the STS-predicted mortality was 5.7%, stroke 2.2%, reoperation for bleeding 3.5%, deep sternal wound infection 0.6%, prolonged ventilation 17.8%, prolonged LOS 14.8%, and combined mortality/morbidity 26.8%. Thirty-six of the 59 patients remained alive (61%) in the follow-up period. Twenty-three patients expired (39%) in the follow-up: 11 of cardiac issues, eight of sepsis, two of stroke, one of gastrointestinal issues, and one of cancer. The average duration of survival for expired patients was 2.28 years (13 days to 5 years and 4 months). Nine patients (15%) underwent renal transplantation and six of them remained alive (67%). Conclusions: CABG surgery in patients with ESRD is complicated with historically high mortality and morbidity. The results of this study demonstrate significant improvement in the reduction in hospital mortality and morbidity. However, intermediate-term outcomes remain poor with a preponderance of cardiovascular and infectious deaths. A trend toward improved intermediate-term outcomes appears in patients in whom CABG surgery was performed for purposes of renal transplantation.

IPC Classification

G06A61A01

Keywords

beating-heartcoronaryarterybypassgraftingpatientsend-stagerenalfailureshort-termgainsintermediate-termlossesjournalcardiorenalmedicineintroductioncabgchronickidneydiseaseposesadditionalsurgical
Diese Veröffentlichung zitieren

€ 4.00