The Revised Cardiac Risk Index (RCRI), or Lee criteria, is a widely used tool for predicting the risk of major adverse cardiac events (MACE) in patients undergoing non-cardiac surgery. It uses six equally weighted clinical risk predictors to stratify patients.
The six criteria for the RCRI are:
High-risk surgery: Intrathoracic, intraperitoneal, or suprainguinal vascular surgery.
History of ischemic heart disease: Includes prior myocardial infarction (MI), current angina, positive exercise test, pathological Q waves on an ECG, or use of nitrate therapy.
History of congestive heart failure (CHF): Symptoms such as pulmonary edema, bilateral rales, S3 gallop, or paroxysmal nocturnal dyspnea.
History of cerebrovascular disease: Prior stroke or transient ischemic attack (TIA).
Diabetes mellitus requiring preoperative insulin treatment: (Note: this criterion specifies insulin use, not all diabetes).
Each criterion present adds one point to the total score. The score is used to determine the risk of 30-day perioperative complications, such as myocardial infarction, cardiac arrest, or death.
RCRI Score
Risk Group
Estimated MACE Risk
0
Low
< 1% (approx. 0.5%)
1
Low/Intermediate
approx. 1.3%
2
Intermediate
approx. 4% – 7%
โฅ3
High
approx. 9% – 11%
Clinical Use
The RCRI helps guide further preoperative evaluation and management decisions:
Low-risk patients (score 0-1) generally do not require extensive further cardiac testing and can proceed to surgery without special monitoring.
Intermediate or high-risk patients (score โฅ2) may warrant further assessment, which could include considering functional capacity (Metabolic Equivalents of Task, or METs) or advanced testing such as biomarker assays (BNP/NT-proBNP).
The RCRI is a widely used and validated tool, though it is best suited for stable patients undergoing elective, major non-cardiac surgeries and has limitations in specific populations (e.g., vascular surgery patients, emergency cases). Newer calculators, such as the American College of Surgeons NSQIP MICA calculator, exist to provide more individualized risk estimates. You can calculate the score using an online tool like MDCalc’s Revised Cardiac Risk Index calculator.
๐ซ Revised Cardiac Risk Index (RCRI) โ 20 Advanced MCQs
High-yield RCRI clinical vignettes โข Surgery risk stratification โข Peri-operative decision making
1. A 72-year-old man with insulin-dependent diabetes is scheduled for elective colectomy. His creatinine is 2.3 mg/dL. Which RCRI score does this patient already meet before evaluating for other factors?
A. 0
B. 1
C. 2
D. 3
Creatinine > 2 mg/dL = **1 point**, Insulin therapy = **1 point**. Total = **2 points** even before considering surgery type or cardiac history.
2. Which of the following surgeries is considered โhigh-riskโ for RCRI calculation?
14. A patient has RCRI = 2. According to ACC/AHA perioperative guidelines, what is the next best step before elective major abdominal surgery?
A. Mandatory coronary angiogram
B. Routine preoperative troponin
C. Functional assessment (โฅ4 METS) ยฑ stress testing if poor METS
D. Delay surgery for medical optimization
RCRI = 2 = intermediate risk โ evaluate functional capacity; stress test if poor METS and results will change management.
15. Which CHF criterion qualifies for RCRI scoring?
A. EF < 40%
B. History of pulmonary edema
C. NT-proBNP > 300
D. Diastolic dysfunction grade II
RCRI uses **clinical CHF history**, especially **past pulmonary edema**.
16. A 78-year-old male with no cardiac history has creatinine 2.8 mg/dL and is scheduled for a laparoscopic colectomy (not high-risk). What is his RCRI score?
A. 1
B. 2
C. 0
D. 3
Only factor present is **creatinine >2 mg/dL** โ 1 point.
17. Which combination gives an RCRI score of exactly 2?
A. High-risk surgery + hypertension
B. Insulin therapy + CAD
C. CHF + anemia
D. Stroke + creatinine 2.1 mg/dL
Insulin = 1, CAD = 1 โ total = **2**.
18. RCRI assigns 1 point for which definition of ischemic heart disease?
A. Coronary calcium score >300
B. Atypical angina
C. Positive stress test for ischemia
D. Nitrate-responsive chest pain
A **positive stress test** = documented ischemia โ counts as CAD.
19. Which of the following is MOST appropriate in a patient with RCRI = 4 scheduled for elective non-urgent surgery?
A. Proceed with surgery without evaluation
B. Routine pre-op troponin only
C. Only ECG required
D. Formal cardiology evaluation ยฑ stress testing
RCRI โฅ3 requires **formal cardiac assessment** before elective surgery.
20. A patient with RCRI = 0 is planned for intermediate-risk surgery. What is the expected event risk?