Abstract

Abstract Background In the Universal Definition of Myocardial Infarction (MI) myocardial injury was introduced as a specific diagnosis in patients with elevated troponin concentrations, but without evidence of acute myocardial ischemia. However, their differentiation within the acute setting might be challenging. Therefore, we sought to investigate a multibiomarker panel in these patients and determine the discriminative capacity to differentiation MI from myocardial injury. Methods We use a cohorts of acute patients presenting to the emergency department. All final diagnoses were adjudicated by two physicians in a blinded fashion and based on the fourth universal definition of MI. In case of disagreement a third physician referred. For the present analyses only patients diagnosed with MI or myocardial injury were used. A panel of 28 biomarkers was measured in blood samples collected directly at admission. Spearman correlations were calculated. A multivariable logistic regression model using MI as the dependent variable was used and the predictors were chosen via backward step-back selection. Odds ratios (OR) were calculated for each predictor. Results We included 359 patients; 138 were diagnosed as having MI and 221 has having myocardial injury. The median age of the study population was 73 years and 59.1% were males. Hypertension was diagnosed in 80.4%, dyslipidemia in 45.4% and diabetes in 19.0%.The biomarker panel showed a wide range of correlations (Figure 1). In the multivariable model five logarithmized biomarkers (N-terminal prohormone of brain natriuretic peptide [OR 0.62], pulmonary and activation-regulated chemokine [OR 0.51], tumor-necrosis-factor-receptor 2 [OR 2.22], copeptin [OR 1.59] and high-sensitivity troponin I [OR 1.80]) were significant discriminators between MI and myocardial injury. Internal validation of the model via bootstrap shows a for overoptimism corrected area under the curve of 0.84. Conclusion In the multivariable model five biomarkers were discriminators between MI and myocardial injury. Spearman correlations Funding Acknowledgement Type of funding source: Public grant(s) – National budget only. Main funding source(s): Research fellowship by the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft

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