Abstract

We investigated patients presenting to emergency departments (EDs) with chest pain to identify factors that influence the use of invasive coronary angiography (ICA). Using linked ED, hospitalisations, death and cardiac biomarker data, we identified people aged 20 years and over who presented with chest pain to tertiary public hospital EDs in Western Australia from 1 January 2016 to 31 March 2017 (ED chest pain cohort). We report patient characteristics, ED discharge diagnosis, pathways to ICA, ICA within 90 days, troponin test results, and gender differences. Associations were examined with the Pearson Chi-squared test and multivariate logistic regression. There were 16,974 people in the ED chest pain cohort, with a mean age of 55.6 years and 50.7% males, accounting for 20,131 ED presentations. Acute coronary syndrome was the ED discharge diagnosis in 10.4% of presentations. ED pathways were: discharged home (57.5%); hospitalisation (41.7%); interhospital transfer (0.4%); and died in ED (0.03%)/inpatients (0.3%). There were 1546 (9.1%) ICAs performed within 90 days of the first ED chest pain visit, of which 59 visits (3.8%) had no troponin tests and 565 visits (36.6%) had normal troponin. ICAs were performed in more men than women (12.3% vs. 6.1%, p < 0.0001; adjusted OR 1.89, 95% CI 1.65, 2.18), and mostly within 7 days. Equal numbers of males and females present with chest pain to tertiary hospital EDs, but men are twice as likely to get ICA. Over one-third of ICAs occur in those with normal troponin levels, indicating that further investigation is required to determine risk profile, outcomes and cost effectiveness.

Highlights

  • Chest pain is one of the most common presenting conditions to emergency departments (EDs) worldwide, with over 6.5 million presentations per year in the USA [1]

  • We investigated the use of Invasive coronary angiography (ICA) in patients who present with chest pain to tertiary public hospital EDs and the different pathways by which this occurs

  • We found that men and women are represented in the group of people who visit EDs for investigation of chest pain, but have different demographic and clinical characteristics

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Summary

Introduction

Chest pain is one of the most common presenting conditions to emergency departments (EDs) worldwide, with over 6.5 million presentations per year in the USA [1]. 500,000 ED visits per year with a presenting complaint of chest pain [2]. This has resulted in ‘pain in throat and chest’ being the 2nd most common principal diagnosis on ED discharge, accounting for over 300,000 discharges and increasing each year [3]. Invasive coronary angiography (ICA) is the standard and well-established diagnostic method for detecting coronary artery disease in patients. Res. Public Health 2020, 17, 9502; doi:10.3390/ijerph17249502 www.mdpi.com/journal/ijerph

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