Chest Pain Clinical Trial
Official title:
Diagnostic Utility of Copeptin in Addition to High-sensitivity Cardiac Troponin for the Early Diagnosis of Non-ST-Elevation Acute Coronary Syndromes - The COPACS Study
Rapid and reliable exclusion of acute myocardial infarction (AMI) during an emergency department (ED) triage is a major unmet clinical need. We aimed at verifying the non-inferiority of a single-sampling strategy of hs-cTn and copeptin compared with the dual hs-cTn sampling for the early diagnosis of Non-ST-Elevation Acute Coronary Syndromes (NSTE-ACS) versus Non Coronary Chest Pain (NCCP) in a selected cohort of consecutive patients admitted at the Emergency Department.
The evaluation of chest pain patients in the emergency department remains a costly and
difficult challenge, because a large proportion of them do not suffer from an acute coronary
syndrome (ACS). The adequate ruling out of ACS in patients with chest pain is crucial, as
the erroneous discharge of a patient with ACS is associated with a high risk of cardiac
events. Rapid assessment of these patients is critical to direct further diagnostic and
therapeutic strategies. Electrocardiography (ECG) and cardiac troponin (cTn) are the current
diagnostic cornerstones and complement clinical assessment in current AMI guidelines1. They
allow to rule in an acute myocardial infarction (AMI) within the first 3 hours after
presentation in the majority of patients and offer the opportunity to initiate appropriate,
evidence-based treatment. The vast majority of patients presenting to the Emergency
Department (ED) with suspected AMI, however, finally prove not to have AMI. The current
process of ruling out AMI is time-consuming and expensive. One fourth to one-third of
patients with AMI present without significant ECG changes indicative of acute ischemia;
therefore, the ECG is of little help to rule out AMI, especially in the setting of non-ST
elevation ACS (NSTE-ACS). High-sensitivity (hs)-cTn assays have been developed recently,
enabling measurements of concentrations that are ∼10-fold lower than those previously
measurable. Recent studies have confirmed the increased accuracy of these high-sensitivity
assays compared with conventional assays in the early detection of AMI and in the safely
ruling in or out of coronary causes of chest pain. However, concerns have been raised about
a possible specificity deficit with these new assays. In addition, a second measurement of
hs-cTn may be warranted in order to increase the accuracy of the assay.
Copeptin, the C-terminal part of the vasopressin pro-hormone, and a marker of acute
endogenous stress, has been demonstrated to be useful for a more rapid ruling out of acute
myocardial infarction. Current evidence for the diagnostic validity and performance of a
combination of high sensitivity-cardiac troponin and copeptin is limited and controversial.
A Bayesian probabilistic approach is likely to be the correct way to evaluate the possible
incremental value of copeptin in the detection of ACS. Thus, we aim at prospectively
evaluating the diagnostic accuracy of copeptin, hs-cTn, CK-MB and myoglobin, alone or in
combination with hs-cTn, for the early diagnosis and ruling out of Non-ST-Elevation (NSTE)
ACS versus non-cardiac causes of chest pain in a selected cohort of Emergency Department
(ED) chest pain patients according to their pre-test probability, as assessed through a
combination of two validated clinical risk score systems (i.e. Chest Pain Score and TIMI
Risk Score).
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