Article Text
Abstract
Objective Cardiac auscultation is a key clinical skill, particularly for the diagnosis of valvular heart disease (VHD). However, its utility has declined due to the widespread availability of echocardiography and diminishing emphasis on the importance of clinical examination. We aim to determine the contemporary accuracy of auscultation for diagnosing VHD in primary care.
Methods Cardiac auscultation was undertaken by one of two experienced general practitioners (primary care/family doctors) in a subset of 251 asymptomatic participants aged >65 years undergoing echocardiography within a large community-based screening study of subjects with no known VHD. Investigators were blinded to the echocardiographic findings. Newly detected VHD was classified as mild (mild regurgitation of any valve or aortic sclerosis) or significant (at least moderate regurgitation or mild stenosis of any valve).
Results Newly identified VHD was common, with mild disease in 170/251 participants (68%) and significant disease in 36/251 (14%). The sensitivity of auscultation was low for the diagnosis of mild VHD (32%) but slightly higher for significant VHD (44%), with specificities of 67% and 69%, respectively. Likelihood ratios were not statistically significant for the diagnosis of either mild or significant VHD in the overall cohort, but showed possible value for auscultation in non-overweight subjects (body mass index <25 kg/m2).
Conclusion Cardiac auscultation has limited accuracy for the detection of VHD in asymptomatic patients and is a poor diagnostic screening tool in primary care, particularly for overweight subjects. Ensuring easy access to echocardiography in patients with symptoms suggesting VHD is likely to represent a better diagnostic strategy.
- primary care
- valvular heart disease
- health care economics
- quality and outcomes of care
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Introduction
Cardiac auscultation is one of the key clinical skills used by physicians in the diagnosis and assessment of valvular heart disease (VHD). However, its perceived utility has declined as a consequence of diminishing emphasis on the importance of clinical examination and the widespread availability of echocardiography.1 While previous studies have evaluated the use of auscultation in the diagnosis of VHD (mainly in children) among hospital doctors,2–6 none have assessed the auscultation skills of general practitioners (primary care/family doctors) in older subjects (in whom VHD is more common). Primary care practitioners rarely have immediate access to echocardiography, and practical clinical skills such as auscultation are used for diagnostic assessment.
Symptoms present late in the natural history of VHD, resulting in delayed referral for specialist assessment and consideration of surgical or percutaneous intervention. The Oxfordshire Valvular Heart Disease Population Cohort Study (OxVALVE) is the first prospective community-based study of VHD worldwide7 and has demonstrated a high prevalence of undiagnosed VHD in older people. In this substudy, we evaluated the accuracy of cardiac auscultation by primary care/family doctors in the diagnosis of VHD, with transthoracic echocardiography as the reference standard.
Methods
We identified 251 individuals undergoing echocardiography at two primary care sites participating in OxVALVE—a large 4000-patient community-based prospective screening study identifying the prevalence of undiagnosed VHD in asymptomatic subjects aged over 65 years.7
Systematic cardiac auscultation, incorporating assessment of pulse character and murmur radiation (where appropriate), was undertaken by one of two fully trained primary care/family doctors. In the UK, these practitioners complete a prescribed 3-year training programme including a variety of clinical placements. In subsequent independent practice, they see unselected patients in primary care, covering presentations across all areas, including gerontology, gynaecology, adult internal medicine and paediatrics. Each of the participating primary care/family doctors had greater than 10 years of clinical experience (although neither of them had received specialist cardiology training). They used an acoustic stethoscope under ‘real world conditions’ without the knowledge of the echocardiographic findings. During the same study visit, heart sounds were recorded using an electronic stethoscope (3M Littmann Electronic Stethoscope Model 3200), and these sounds were analysed at a later date by two consultant cardiologists (without visual analysis of the waveform or knowledge of the echocardiographic findings).
An investigating physician or sonographer undertook detailed transthoracic echocardiography with a Vivid-Q portable machine (Vingmed-General Electric, Horton, Norway) immediately following auscultation using standard views according to the British Society of Echocardiography guidelines. Valve anatomy, physiology and the severity of VHD were classified according to international guideline criteria.8–10 For the purposes of this analysis, VHD was defined as either mild (aortic sclerosis or mild regurgitation of any valve) or significant (at least moderate regurgitation or mild stenosis of any valve).
Standard measures of diagnostic accuracy (sensitivity, specificity, positive and negative predictive values, positive and negative likelihood ratios) were determined using echocardiographic assessment as the reference standard. We performed separate analyses to determine if diagnostic accuracy of auscultation by primary care/family doctors was different in those with or without high body mass index (BMI ≥25 kg/m2). For the cardiologists, 2×2 confusion matrices based on their ratings were combined using means for the purposes of analysis. Statistical analyses were performed using Stata V.14.2 (StataCorp) and R V.3.4.3 (R Foundation for Statistical Computing).
Results
The mean age of study participants was 75±6 years (51% male). Cardiac murmurs were heard in 82 subjects (80 systolic, 2 diastolic) by the primary care/family doctors with a higher likelihood of detection in women. By comparison, cardiac murmurs were heard in 102 subjects (79 systolic, 23 diastolic) by cardiologists.
Echocardiography demonstrated mild and significant VHD in 170/251 (68%) and 36/251 (14%) participants, respectively. Details concerning the accuracy of VHD diagnosis by auscultation are provided in table 1. Detection of mild VHD by general practitioners was modest overall (sensitivity 32%, specificity 67%) but slightly better for significant VHD (sensitivity 44%, specificity 69%). Conversely, the negative predictive value of cardiac auscultation for the exclusion of significant VHD was reasonable (88%). However, this was similar to the proportion of subjects without significant VHD in the cohort (86%), indicating that auscultation did not aid the separation of those with/without VHD. This was supported by the positive and negative likelihood ratios which suggested that auscultation had poor diagnostic yield, with no statistically significant likelihood ratios for the prediction of either mild or significant VHD (table 1). Subanalysis according to BMI (table 2) suggested that this yield was particularly low in overweight patients (BMI ≥25 kg/m2), although lower numbers in the subgroups precluded many statistically significant differences between these groups, and caution is required in interpreting subgroup analyses.
The assessment of recorded heart sounds by cardiologists was less sensitive but more specific for the detection of both mild (sensitivity 22%, specificity 83%) and significant (sensitivity 31%, specificity 81%) VHD. Similar to the primary care/family doctors, the negative predictive value of auscultation was high (88%). However, the cardiologists’ analysis of recorded heart sounds showed no statistically significant likelihood ratios for the overall prediction of VHD (table 1).
Discussion
Summary of findings
In this study, among 251 asymptomatic elderly subjects, the prevalence of newly diagnosed mild and significant VHD detected using echocardiography was 68% and 14%, respectively. Cardiac auscultation (blinded to the echocardiographic findings) demonstrated only modest sensitivity for the detection of VHD. Furthermore, both negative and positive likelihood ratios were close to unity, suggesting that auscultation did not provide useful discriminative information for the diagnosis of VHD in an asymptomatic elderly population. However, diagnostic accuracy is likely to be improved in those presenting with symptoms suggestive of VHD (which has not been examined in this study). Sub-group analysis has also suggested that clinical screening without the need for echocardiography may have greater utility in non-overweight subjects, but it may not hold in overweight subjects (BMI >25 kg/m2) where our data suggest that auscultation is less accurate.
Comparison with existing literature
Other studies indicate that the widespread availability of echocardiography has led to a decline in cardiac auscultation skills (and, by inference the ability to diagnose VHD) among medical students and postgraduate trainees across a wide range of medical specialties, including cardiology, paediatrics, internal medicine and family practice.11–13 Indeed, auscultation is frequently omitted from routine examination by primary care practitioners, even in the presence of cardiac symptoms.14 Proficiency in cardiac auscultation is low in the USA, Canada and England15 and in one report, almost 20% of patients with severe aortic stenosis have been missed during cardiovascular examination by a cardiologist.16 Consistent with our findings, cardiac auscultation in one hospital-based study demonstrated sensitivities of 0%–37% and specificities of 85%–100% in the assessment of 294 patients with mainly regurgitant murmurs, using echocardiography as the reference standard.3
Earlier diagnosis of VHD is an important clinical goal to facilitate assessment in a specialist valve clinic, education concerning key symptoms and the prevention of infective endocarditis, and timely referral for surgery or percutaneous intervention.17 There are limited previous data concerning the accuracy of physical examination in subjects with asymptomatic VHD2 and echocardiographic population screening has a low yield for the detection of VHD in younger subjects,18 19 except in areas where childhood rheumatic heart disease remains highly prevalent.5 6 Even in a large study of over 2000 patients undergoing open access echocardiography, only 127 (18%) of 706 with a murmur had significant VHD.20
Strengths and limitations
The purpose of this study was to provide a real-world analysis of auscultation performed in an outpatient setting by primary care/family doctors without specialist training in cardiology using echocardiography as the reference standard. Direct comparison of the accuracy of conventional cardiac auscultation by general practitioners and cardiologists in the same patients was not possible for logistical reasons. A resulting significant limitation of our indirect comparison was that the primary care/family doctors undertook conventional auscultation using an acoustic stethoscope while the cardiologists accessed recorded heart sounds of better fidelity from the same patients but without access to other clinical features. Furthermore, measures of the predictive accuracy of any diagnostic test are dependent on the prevalence of the disease, and significant VHD was present in only 14% of our study cohort.
Implications for research and/or practice
Our findings demonstrate that cardiac auscultation has only modest sensitivity for the detection of VHD in an asymptomatic population, and the low negative likelihood ratio suggests that auscultation is a poor diagnostic tool for the screening of asymptomatic patients in primary care. Our data suggest that it may perform better in non-overweight patients (BMI <25 kg/m2), and it is likely that diagnostic yield would be higher in those presenting with symptoms. The wider OxVALVE study indicates that the diagnostic yield of echocardiography is significantly increased by the inclusion of atrial fibrillation or cardiac symptoms as indicators of possible underlying VHD7 20—initial screening in this high-risk group could be performed using point-of-care echocardiography to reduce demand on scarce echocardiography resources.21 22
Key messages
What is already known on this subject?
Cardiac auscultation is widely taught, and it is believed to have some diagnostic accuracy for valvular heart disease (VHD) in symptomatic patients, but the ability to diagnose VHD in asymptomatic subjects is unclear.
What might this study add?
Cardiac auscultation has limited accuracy for the detection of VHD in unselected asymptomatic patients and is a poor diagnostic screening tool in primary care, particularly for overweight subjects.
How might this impact on clinical practice?
Echocardiography is likely to represent a better diagnostic strategy in patients with symptoms suggesting VHD or for VHD screening in general practice.
Acknowledgments
The authors thank Jacqueline Birks and Eleni Frangou from the Centre for Statistics in Medicine, Nuffield Department of Orthopaedics, Rheumatology and Musculoskeletal Sciences, University of Oxford for their help in statistical analysis of this study.
References
Footnotes
Contributors The study was conceived by BDP and SC. JH and AP performed the initial auscultation. AP acquired the subsequent electronic recording of the heart sounds. Analysis of the recorded heart sounds was performed by ML and Jd’A; and data analysis was performed by SKMG, AK, SGM and JW. The manuscript was drafted by SKMG and SGM and all authors have critically reviewed the manuscript.
Funding Supported by the National Institute for Health Research (NIHR) Biomedical Research Centre, Oxford.
Competing interests None declared.
Patient consent Not required.
Ethics approval The OxVALVE study has approval from the South Central—Hampshire A Research Ethics Committee, REC reference: 09/H0502/58.
Provenance and peer review Not commissioned; externally peer reviewed.