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26 Distribution of high sensitivity troponin levels in consecutive, unselected patients in the emergency department and relationship to in-hospital mortality

Hinton, Jonathan; Mariathas, Mark; Gabara, Lavinia; Nicholas, Zoe; Allan, Rick; Ramamoorthy, Sanjay; Mamas, Mamas; Mahmoudi, Michael; Cook, Paul; Curzen, Nick

Authors

Jonathan Hinton

Mark Mariathas

Lavinia Gabara

Zoe Nicholas

Rick Allan

Sanjay Ramamoorthy

Michael Mahmoudi

Paul Cook

Nick Curzen



Abstract

Introduction The introduction of high-sensitivity troponin assays has facilitated pathways to rapidly exclude myocardial infarction (MI) in patients presenting to the emergency department (ED) with chest pain. However, hs-cTn concentrations above the manufacturer-supplied upper limit of normal (ULN) are frequently detected in patients presenting to ED, despite only a small proportion having a type 1 MI. Furthermore, there is also increasing evidence that hs-cTn concentrations may act as a biomarker of cardiovascular risk in patients outside the context of acute coronary syndrome. In the current study, we report the distribution of hs-cTn in the subpopulation of CHARIOT who attended ED, in whom the assay was taken regardless of whether there was a clinical indication. Our aim was to test the hypothesis that hs-cTn may be a biomarker for in-hospital mortality, irrespective of the indication for its measurement.

Method The study included 5708 consecutive patients attending ED in a single centre. In all cases hs-cTnI was measured either as requested by the clinical team, or as part of the study, in which case both the clinical team and the patient were unaware of the test. Basic demographics were available from the original CHARIOT study and both the electronic clinical record and coding data were interrogated to ascertain the clinical outcome.

Results 491 (8.6%) patients had hs-cTnI concentrations above the manufacturer’s ULN. There were 4157 (72.8%) patients in whom the hs-cTnI was performed solely as part of the study, with 309 (7.4%) of these above the ULN. Five patients died in ED. Of the remaining patients, 3603 (63.2%) were admitted to hospital. The rate of admission increased with rising hs-cTnI concentrations (table 1). A cardiovascular diagnosis was the most frequent discharge diagnosis in those with a hs-cTnI above the ULN. However, a neurological condition was most common in the patients in whom the test was only performed as part of the study. Increasing hs-cTnI concentrations were associated with increasing in hospital mortality regardless of whether the hs-cTnI was requested for clinical reasons or not (figures 1 & 2). Furthermore, hs-cTnI demonstrated good discriminative ability for in-patient mortality (area under receiver operator curve 0.834). Hs-cTnI above the ULN remained an independent predictor of mortality on multivariate analysis. The median length of stay was also associated with increasing hs-cTnI concentrations.

Citation

Hinton, J., Mariathas, M., Gabara, L., Nicholas, Z., Allan, R., Ramamoorthy, S., Mamas, M., Mahmoudi, M., Cook, P., & Curzen, N. 26 Distribution of high sensitivity troponin levels in consecutive, unselected patients in the emergency department and relationship to in-hospital mortality. Presented at Abstracts from the British Cardiovascular Society Annual Conference 2020

Presentation Conference Type Conference Paper (published)
Conference Name Abstracts from the British Cardiovascular Society Annual Conference 2020
Online Publication Date Jul 17, 2020
Publication Date 2020-07
Deposit Date Jun 22, 2023
Journal Heart
Print ISSN 1355-6037
Electronic ISSN 1468-201X
Publisher BMJ Publishing Group
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
Volume 106
Issue S2
DOI https://doi.org/10.1136/heartjnl-2020-bcs.26
Public URL https://keele-repository.worktribe.com/output/503117