Abstract

BackgroundA considerable proportion of patients with angina‐like symptoms in an emergency department have very low pretest probability for acute myocardial infarction (AMI). Numerous algorithms exist for the exclusion of AMI, usually including laboratory tests. We aimed to investigate whether patients with very low risk can safely be identified by ECG and clinical information without biomarker testing, contributing to saving time and costs.MethodsProspective diagnostic test accuracy study. We included all consecutive patients presenting with angina at the department of emergency medicine of a tertiary care hospital during a 1‐year period. Using clinical information without biomarker testing and ECG, the “Mini‐GRACE score,” based on the well‐established GRACE‐score without using laboratory parameters was calculated. In a cohort design we compared the index test Mini‐GRACE to AMI as reference standard in the final diagnosis using standard measures of diagnostic test accuracy.ResultsWe included 2755 patients (44% female, age 44 ± 17 years). AMI was diagnosed in 103 (4%) patients, among those 44% with STEMI. Overall 2562 patients (93%) had a negative “Mini‐GRACE,” four (0.2%) of these patients had myocardial infarction, and this results in a sensitivity of 96.1% (95% CI 90.4%‐98.9%), specificity 96.5% (95.7%‐97.1%), positive predictive value 51.3% (46.3%‐56.3%) and negative predictive value 99.8% (99.6%‐99.9%). Model performance according to C statistic (0.90) and Brier score (0.0045) was excellent. In rule‐out patients 30‐day mortality was 0.3% and 1‐year mortality was 0.8%.ConclusionsPatients with very low risk of AMI can be identified with high certainty using clinical information without biomarker testing and ECG. Cardiac biomarkers might be avoided in such cases, potentially leading to a significant cost reduction.

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