A scoping review of 86 studies identified 17 distinct methods to define chronotropic incompetence, which demonstrated poor agreement and significant classification differences in clinical practice.
Systematic Review (n=86)
What are the current definitions of chronotropic incompetence and how does their variability affect diagnosis in cardiac rehabilitation patients?
86 published studies defining chronotropic incompetence and prediction models for age-predicted maximal heart rate (APMHR), and a retrospective cohort of patients participating in a cardiac rehabilitation program
Application of various diagnostic criteria for chronotropic incompetence and prediction models for APMHR
Definitions of chronotropic incompetence, prediction models for APMHR, and diagnostic agreement between definitions in a clinical cohort
Current methods to define chronotropic incompetence and predict maximal heart rate are highly inconsistent, leading to poor diagnostic agreement in clinical practice.
AIMS: Chronotropic incompetence (CI), defined as the inability of the heart to appropriately increase its rate in response to exercise, is associated with exercise intolerance and adverse events. However, the diagnostic criteria for CI vary widely, limiting their clinical applicability and comparability across studies. Here we aim to systematically map the current definitions of CI and the prediction models used to estimate age-predicted maximal heart rate (APMHR). We illustrate how this diagnostic variability affects the identification of CI in patients enrolled in a cardiac rehabilitation program. METHODS: A scoping review systematically identified all published definitions of CI and prediction models for APMHR. A retrospective study evaluated the agreement between definitions in patients participating in cardiac rehabilitation. RESULTS: A total of 86 studies were included. Seventeen distinct methods to define CI were identified, ranging from absolute or relative peak heart rate parameters to approaches incorporating workload. In many cases, the applied cut-off values lacked a rationale. In parallel, numerous APMHR formulas were identified, differing by sex, age category, fitness level, clinical status, and the use of beta-blocker therapy, showing limited accuracy. In the clinical setting agreement between four major definitions was poor and pairwise comparisons between them showed significant differences in classification. CONCLUSION: Current methods to define CI and predict APMHR are inconsistent and problematic. This review provides a practical framework for selecting a context-appropriate definition and formula. It identifies current methodological gaps and highlights the need for future research to establish a consensus definition of CI.
Building similarity graph...
Analyzing shared references across papers
Loading...
Vermeiren et al. (Mon,) conducted a systematic review in Chronotropic incompetence (n=86). Definitions of chronotropic incompetence and APMHR prediction models was evaluated on Agreement between definitions of chronotropic incompetence. A scoping review of 86 studies identified 17 distinct methods to define chronotropic incompetence, which demonstrated poor agreement and significant classification differences in clinical practice.
synapsesocial.com/papers/69fd7fcdbfa21ec5bbf085eb — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1093/eurjpc/zwag253
Margot Vermeiren
KU Leuven
Nore Primus
KU Leuven
Kato Heyns
KU Leuven
European Journal of Preventive Cardiology
KU Leuven
Universitair Ziekenhuis Leuven
St Vincents Institute of Medical Research
Building similarity graph...
Analyzing shared references across papers
Loading...