Abstract
A non-negligible proportion of patients with chest pain with negative cardiac troponin may harbor a disrupted coronary plaque. A marker of plaque rupture upstream from myocardial necrosis may help identify high-risk patients among this patient population. The purpose of this study was to investigate the correlation of plasma myeloperoxidase (MPO) concentration and angiographic coronary disease among patients with suspected troponin-negative coronary syndromes. Patients presenting with chest pain and negative cardiac troponin-T concentration and undergoing coronary angiography were enrolled in our study. Plasma MPO concentration was measured using a single blood sample collected prior to cardiac catheterization. The primary angiographic endpoint was the presence of at least one coronary stenosis causing a 70% or more diameter reduction; secondary endpoints were number of diseased vessels, presence of coronary thrombus, and lesion ulceration. The main clinical endpoint was coronary revascularization. Three hundred and eighty-nine patients were enrolled. Presence of coronary stenosis causing a 70% or more diameter reduction increased with increasing quartiles of myeloperoxidase concentration (P<0.0001), as did the presence of coronary thrombus (P<0.0001) and plaque ulceration (P<0.0001). The need for percutaneous coronary revascularization also increased with increasing quartiles of systemic myeloperoxidase levels (P<0.0001). Coronary surgical revascularization did not differ among myeloperoxidase quartiles. Among patients with chest pain without troponin elevation, a single measurement of plasma MPO concentration can help identify patients with a higher risk of having significant coronary stenoses and high-risk angiographic features.
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