Abstract

Decision-making is challenging in patients with chest pain and normal high-sensitivity cardiac troponin T (hs-cTnT; <99th percentile; <14 ng/L) at hospital arrival. Most of these patients might be discharged early. We investigated clinical data and hs-cTnT concentrations for risk stratification. This is a retrospective study including 4476 consecutive patients presenting to the emergency department with chest pain and first normal hs-cTnT. The primary endpoint was one-year death or acute myocardial infarction, and the secondary endpoint added urgent revascularization. The number of primary and secondary endpoints was 173 (3.9%) and 252 (5.6%). Mean hs-cTnT concentrations were 6.9 ± 2.5 ng/L. Undetectable (<5 ng/L) hs-cTnT (n = 1847, 41%) had optimal negative predictive value (99.1%) but suboptimal sensitivity (90.2%) and discrimination accuracy (AUC = 0.664) for the primary endpoint. Multivariable analysis was used to identify the predictive clinical variables. The clinical model showed good discrimination accuracy (AUC = 0.810). The addition of undetectable hs-cTnT (≥ or <5 ng/L; HR, hazard ratio = 3.80; 95% CI, confidence interval 2.27–6.35; p = 0.00001) outperformed the clinical model alone (AUC = 0.836, p = 0.002 compared to the clinical model). Measurable hs-cTnT concentrations (between detection limit and 99th percentile; per 0.1 ng/L, HR = 1.13; CI 1.06–1.20; p = 0.0001) provided further predictive information (AUC = 0.844; p = 0.05 compared to the clinical plus undetectable hs-cTnT model). The results were reproducible for the secondary endpoint and 30-day events. Clinical assessment, undetectable hs-cTnT and measurable hs-cTnT concentrations must be considered for decision-making after a single negative hs-cTnT result in patients presenting to the emergency department with acute chest pain.

Highlights

  • Chest pain is a frequent cause of emergency department visits

  • Unlike most other research in the field, this study focused on patients presenting at the emergency department with acute chest pain without signs of ischemia in the ECG and having normal initial high-sensitivity cardiac troponin T (hs-cTnT) concentrations

  • We aimed to evaluate the potential role of clinical data, undetectable hs-cTnT, and measurable hscTnT concentrations, for one-year outcomes

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Summary

Introduction

Chest pain is a frequent cause of emergency department visits. Only a minority of these patients is diagnosed with acute myocardial infarction (AMI) or experiences cardiac events [1]. The advent of high-sensitivity cardiac troponin (hs-cTn) assays has improved diagnostic accuracy. Hs-cTn elevation implies a high risk requiring a complete diagnostic work-up and close monitoring regardless of a final diagnosis of AMI or nonischemic myocardial injury [2]. The scenario is perhaps more challenging when hs-cTn concentrations are normal (below the 99th percentile) at hospital arrival. Overall, these are lower-risk patients, but their event rate is far from negligible [3,4]

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