Use of highly sensitive
troponin I assay in the emergency department may help determine diagnosis
of myocardial infarction
For patients admitted to an emergency department
with chest pain, use of a contemporary or highly sensitive test
for levels of troponin I may help rule-out a diagnosis of myocardial
infarction (MI), while changes in the measured levels of this biomarker
at 3 hours after admission may be useful to confirm a diagnosis
of MI, according to a study in the December 28 issue of JAMA.
One of the most common reasons patients seek care in an emergency
department is for acute chest pain. "Early identification of
individuals at high and intermediate risk for myocardial ischemia
is crucial because they benefit the most from early and aggressive
treatment. According to international consensus and task force definitions
of myocardial infarction, the diagnosis of MI is based mainly on
an elevated cardiac troponin level exceeding the 99th percentile
and demonstrating an increase or decrease over time," the authors
write. Highly sensitive troponin assays have been developed recently
that reliably assess troponin levels in more than 50 percent of
the general population. "The reliable detection of very low
troponin concentrations using these new highly sensitive assays
in the acute setting might pose a challenge in everyday clinical
practice."
Till Keller, M.D., of the University Heart Center Hamburg, Germany,
and colleagues evaluated the diagnostic performance of the newly
developed highly sensitive troponin I (hsTnI) assay compared with
a contemporary troponin I (cTnI) assay and their serial changes
in the diagnosis of heart attack. The study included a total of
1,818 patients with suspected acute coronary syndrome who were enrolled
at chest pain units in Germany from 2007 to 2008. Twelve biomarkers
including hsTnI and cTnI were measured on admission and after 3
and 6 hours.
Of the patients in the study, 413 (22.7 percent) had a final discharge
diagnosis of acute MI. For discrimination of acute MI, both hsTnI
and cTnI were superior to the other evaluated diagnostic biomarkers.
Using the 99th percentile cutoff, hsTnI on admission had a sensitivity
of 82.3 percent and negative predictive value (NPV) of 94.7 percent;
hsTnI determined after 3 hours had a sensitivity of 98.2 percent
with NPV of 99.4 percent. Compared with hsTnI, the cTnI assay (using
the 99th percentile as cutoff) had comparable sensitivity and NPV:
79.4 percent sensitivity and 94.0 percent NPV on admission, and
98.2 percent sensitivity and 99.4 percent NPV after 3 hours.
"Combining the 99th percentile cutoff at admission with the
serial change in troponin concentration within 3 hours, the positive
predictive value (for ruling in AMI) for hsTnI increased from 75.1
percent at admission to 95.8 percent after 3 hours, and for cTnl
increased from 80.9 percent at admission to 96.1 percent after 3
hours," the authors write.
"The shortcoming of conventional troponin assays with low
sensitivity within the first hours after chest pain onset led to
the evaluation of various so-called early biomarkers in the diagnosis
of MI. In our study, the diagnostic information of hsTnI was superior
to all other evaluated biomarkers alone."
"Use of hsTnI and cTnI assays in patients with suspected MI
provides useful diagnostic information," the researchers write.
"Determination of hsTnI and cTnI values 3 hours after admission
to the emergency department with use of the 99th percentile cutoff
provides an NPV greater than 99 percent, potentially allowing a
safe rule-out of MI. Application of the relative change in hsTnI
or cTnI concentration within 3 hours after admission in combination
with the 99th percentile diagnostic cutoff value on admission improves
specificity and may facilitate an accurate early rule-in of MI."
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