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Duke Treadmill Score
Duke Treadmill Score
Predicts coronary artery disease severity and future cardiac risk.

Duke Treadmill Score
Duke Treadmill Score
Predicts coronary artery disease severity and future cardiac risk.
Instructions
The Duke Treadmill Score (DTS) is a validated tool used during exercise treadmill testing to estimate the risk of coronary artery disease and long-term cardiovascular prognosis.
Overview
When to use
Why use
Evidences
Interpretation
Score Range | Risk Category |
≥ +5 | Low risk |
-10 to +4 | Intermediate risk |
≤ -11 | High risk |
The Duke Treadmill Score (DTS) combines exercise duration, ST‑segment deviation, and angina during an exercise ECG to stratify prognosis after a standard treadmill test; scores ≥5 indicate low risk, ≤−11 high risk, and intermediate scores warrant further noninvasive imaging, with robust validation showing graded 5–7‑year event risks across categories.
http://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC1123951/
In symptomatic patients with baseline ST‑T abnormalities, the DTS predicted 7‑year cardiac survival of 97% (low), 92% (intermediate), and 76% (high), confirming strong prognostic stratification beyond ST changes alone.
https://jamanetwork.com/journals/jama/fullarticle/191658
Exercise ECG with DTS is recommended for diagnostic and prognostic assessment in those able to exercise with interpretable ECG; intermediate‑risk DTS typically prompts stress imaging, while low‑risk DTS may preclude further testing.
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/NBK499903/
Simplified diagnostic treadmill scores (distinct from DTS) and imaging‑based strategies (exercise echo, nuclear perfusion) can refine risk or diagnosis; some studies show exercise echo outperforms DTS for risk stratification, and adding coronary calcium (CAC) to treadmill findings can improve diagnostic performance in selected populations.
https://globalheartjournal.com/articles/10.5334/gh.766
Overview
When to use
Why use
Evidences
The Duke Treadmill Score (DTS) is a widely used prognostic tool in cardiology that integrates data from an exercise treadmill test (ETT) to provide a quantitative assessment of a patient’s likelihood of having significant coronary artery disease (CAD) and their risk for adverse cardiovascular events. Developed at Duke University in the 1980s, it has become one of the most established and validated tools in exercise testing.
The DTS is calculated from three main components: exercise duration (measured in minutes on the Bruce protocol), the degree of ST-segment deviation (in millimeters), and the presence or absence of angina during the test. Together, these values generate a numerical score that stratifies patients into low, intermediate, or high risk for significant CAD and cardiac mortality.
Clinicians use the DTS to guide patient management after a treadmill test. For example, patients with a low-risk score generally have excellent long-term survival and may not require additional invasive testing, while high-risk patients often need further imaging or coronary angiography. The intermediate group benefits from additional non-invasive evaluation.
Overview
When to use
Why use
Evidences
Interpretation
Score Range | Risk Category |
≥ +5 | Low risk |
-10 to +4 | Intermediate risk |
≤ -11 | High risk |
The Duke Treadmill Score (DTS) combines exercise duration, ST‑segment deviation, and angina during an exercise ECG to stratify prognosis after a standard treadmill test; scores ≥5 indicate low risk, ≤−11 high risk, and intermediate scores warrant further noninvasive imaging, with robust validation showing graded 5–7‑year event risks across categories.
http://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC1123951/
In symptomatic patients with baseline ST‑T abnormalities, the DTS predicted 7‑year cardiac survival of 97% (low), 92% (intermediate), and 76% (high), confirming strong prognostic stratification beyond ST changes alone.
https://jamanetwork.com/journals/jama/fullarticle/191658
Exercise ECG with DTS is recommended for diagnostic and prognostic assessment in those able to exercise with interpretable ECG; intermediate‑risk DTS typically prompts stress imaging, while low‑risk DTS may preclude further testing.
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/NBK499903/
Simplified diagnostic treadmill scores (distinct from DTS) and imaging‑based strategies (exercise echo, nuclear perfusion) can refine risk or diagnosis; some studies show exercise echo outperforms DTS for risk stratification, and adding coronary calcium (CAC) to treadmill findings can improve diagnostic performance in selected populations.
https://globalheartjournal.com/articles/10.5334/gh.766
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